abhagwat wrote:
All of us have seen rainbow, moon-bow, glory, etc. But a sun-bow? This photo was taken by my friend Saee Nair in Melbourne on a cold July 2014 morning.
My experience is that a moon bow is a much less common event than what you've photographed, which appears to be a fairly common 22°
halo. It's not a "bow" as in a rainbow or moon bow because they are seen when the light source is 180° from the arc's center (i.e. back lit wrt to the observer). A halo is viewed with the source in front of the observer at 0°, or at the center of the arc/circle.
Atmospheric Optics is a great website for all kinds of atmospheric phenomena. They have picture of the day too. A good halo picture might land there more so than here.
Edit:
I thought I'd add a bit more information about "sunbow". Wiki describes the sunbow as a
circumzenithal arc (CZA).
Atmospheric Optics also has nice pictures and discussion of the CZA. Although rare, the "sunbow" occurs near the zenith, but
never completes a full circle and
always when the sun is low in sky, i.e. never centered on the sun. A sunbow appears as an upsidedown rainbow.
Halos appear as circles around the sources, e.g. Sun and Moon. Their colors typically are red to pastel, but do not contain
reds greens or blues (unlike the CZA which shows all colors). The reddish color is in the inside (sharp edge towards the sun) as your picture also shows.
Your picture shows all the attributes of a standard halo and It appears to be of the 22° type. Unfortunately, you have not captured a "sunbow" (CZA) but a nice picture for sure.