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I should say I'm in a dark room.
Hello and welcome to Crowdscience from the BBC World Service.
I can't see my guest.
I'm Marnie Chesterton and I'm in an almost pitch black studio with rainbow expert Philip Lavin.
And I think an object in front of me.
What we've got here is a cylinder full of water.
It's a big vertical glass cylinder.
And perhaps we could switch the spotlight on.
As Philip looks for the switch in the dark,
my eyes are drawn to a projection on the wall behind him.
I'm now shining white light at our cylinder full of water, and down here we can see a rainbow.
Yes, the world needs more rainbows, but why did we set up a whole experiment to make one?
Well, any crowd science adventure always starts with a curious listener.
My name is Sakura.
I live in Cambridge, UK.
And what is your question for crowd science?
How big is a rainbow?
Can I ask how you came up with it?
My husband goes for a walk every morning and one morning when he came home he said he'd seen a rainbow so I said was it a big rainbow and he said hmm I don't I think so.