oosidat / NASAHack2014-asteroids

Rocks! Lasers! Profit!
http://rockslasersprofit.com
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links to wiki, projects page, github #55

Closed ssshake closed 10 years ago

oosidat commented 10 years ago

Github page is already there in the footer. I can add the links to the wiki and the nasa page there as well under the github logo. Sounds good?

ssshake commented 10 years ago

I'd prefer the link explicitly. I like the github logo, and keep it, but it's too sublte.

I'd prefer them in the body but if you think it looks better in the footer try it and lets see.

oosidat commented 10 years ago

Site updated - opinion? Or should I still move it to body?

ssshake commented 10 years ago

Ya I think body, just three small lines or whatever, also move the support email above the hosting text.

Email: support@rockslasersprofit.com

Hosting Space donated by Bvisual Design

ssshake commented 10 years ago

here's the update to the asteroid classes section

Asteroid Classes

        Asteroids are categorized into different classes depending on colours of light reflecting off of them. 
        Depending on the colours reflected, it is possible to guess their composition. Asteroids fall into three 
        large categories - <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C-type_asteroid">C (for carbonaceous objects)</a>, 
        <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S-type_asteroid">S (for silicaceous objects)</a>, 
        and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-type_asteroid">X (for metallic objects)</a>. 
        The ingredients needed for life, for example water and carbon, are more likely to be found on C-type asteroids, 
        whereas S-type objects are like rocks you would find on Earth, and X-type asteroids contain more metals like iron, 
        or more precious metals like gold, copper, and zinc.
        <br><br>
        Under these broad categories, asteroids are classified into smaller categories. There are also smaller categories 
        of asteroids that aren't classified in any of the three main categories. 
        <br><br>
        In order to figure out what asteroids will be profitable to mine, you will need to look at the ultraviolet, visible 
        and infrared spectrums coming off of the asteroids. You can then activate various filters to guess at 
        the classification of the asteroids in view. You can see the relative reflectance 
        spectrum of the various asteroid classes in the graph in the HUD. 
        <br><br>            
        Certain classes of asteroids are more common at certain distances from the sun. For example, C-type asteroids are more 
        abundant further from the sun, while S-type asteroids are more abundant closer to the sun. You can check the 
        abundance of each type with relation to its distance from the sun in the graph in the HUD.
ssshake commented 10 years ago

ops, i'll email it

oosidat commented 10 years ago

Links added - reopen if issue