A pair of compasses are use to construct circles and arcs of circles
No, circles do not have angles.
That circles have no sides
Concentric circles.
Ellipses are not circles.
No, as you move the rainbow you see moves too. No, because the bit of the rainbow you see is part of a circle and circles have no end. However, you can direct someone else to the place where YOU see the end of your rainbow (but THEY will not see it when they get there).
Actually it is circular but usually the sun needs to be quite low in the sky for the angle of the sunbeams hitting the raindrops to be suitable to create a rainbow visible from the ground. But, when that happens, a part of the rainbow is cut-off by the horizon and so it appears semicircular. Full circles are rare but have been seen/photographed.
They have many different styles. Ones with no design, circles or some of them even have waves and rectangles. You can get almost any color of the rainbow and black and white.
The closest I ever got was when I had one in my back yard However you cant get to the end of a rain bow because if you get too close your point of view changes to a degree where it becomes invisible to you. In the literal sense, no you can't. a rainbow is simply drops of water in the sky that reflect sunlight to make different spectrums of light. it has no technical beginning or end. Metaphorically, the end of the rainbow could be a successful life or a good retirement, which is possible to get to
If you share with your circles, only your circles can see what you've posted. Extended circles includes people who are in your circles' circles. (Hope that makes sense!)
You can't see the end of a rainbow because it's an optical illusion caused by the refraction, reflection, and dispersion of light in water droplets in the sky. Rainbows are actually full circles, but the horizon or obstacles typically block the lower half from view.
fungo circles
Circles with the same radius are congruent circles.
A pair of compasses are use to construct circles and arcs of circles
A rainbow is an optical and meteorological phenomenon that is caused by reflection of light in water droplets. The rainbow is a circle with the anti-solar point in the middle (the shadow of your eye or the camera capturing the rainbow). The circle of the primary rainbow has a specific angular width of 42° from the anti -solar point. The rainbow is not located at a specific distance, but comes from any water droplets viewed from a certain angle relative to the Sun's rays. Thus, a rainbow is not a physical object, and cannot be physically approached. Indeed, it is impossible for an observer to manoeuvre to see any rainbow from water droplets at any angle other than the customary one of 42 degrees from the direction opposite the Sun. If you use a garden hose to spray droplets when it is sunny out you can see the entire ring and indeed from airplanes and cliff edges I have seen almost entire circles from rain.
Concentric circles are a series of circles within each other.
No, circles do not have angles.