Moonbows, like normal rainbows, are an optical phenomenon caused by light being reflected and refracted by atmospheric water droplets. However, because the moonlight that produces moonbows is much fainter than direct sunlight, they occur less than 10 percent as often as normal rainbows.

Soaring Overdose Rates in the Pandemic Reflected Widening Racial Disparities

NASA Uses Reflected Moonlight To Improve Satellite Accuracy

This is a Classic Example of a Reflection Nebula, Where the Reflected Light From Young Hot Stars Illuminates a Protostellar Cloud of Gas and Dust

Distorted Deja Vu: How the Universe Is Reflected Near Black Holes

Distorted Deja Vu: How the Universe Is Reflected Near Black Holes

Theoretical Physicist Solves How Universe is Reflected near Black Hole