OZONE Asylum
Forums
Stupid Basic HTML
Funky Table
This page's ID:
9519
Search
QuickChanges
Forums
FAQ
Archives
Register
Edit Post
Who can edit a post?
The poster and administrators may edit a post. The poster can only edit it for a short while after the initial post.
Your User Name:
Your Password:
Login Options:
Remember Me On This Computer
Your Text:
Insert Slimies »
Insert UBB Code »
Close
Last Tag
|
All Tags
UBB Help
Hey all! Me again, hehe. Here's a link: [url=http://www.geocities.com/genevievescu/Ozone/Page21.html]http://www.geocities.com/genevievescu/Ozone/Page21.html[/url] As you can see, on the right hand side there is a table. What you SEE starts with "Why does the GP-B" though the table borders only go around "WHY LOW ORBIT?" etc. That title SHOULD be above "Why does the GP-B" and I don't know what I did wrong. If you look at my source: [code] <table class="left" width=250 cellspacing="2"> <tr> <th><h3>WHY LOW ORBIT?</h3></th> </tr> <tr> <p>Why does the GP-B satellite orbit so close to the Earth's atmosphere? Even at the edge of the Earth's atmosphere, the individual molecules and atoms of the atmosphere create too much friction for the satellite to follow its precise orbit. Why not orbit farther from Earth, outside its atmosphere?</p> </tr> <tr> <p>The reason is that the effects of local spacetime (its curve and twist) weaken dramatically as one moves farther from the Earth. GP-B chose an orbit that would get it as close to the Earth as possible, to see the spacetime effects more clearly. A 400-mile altitude was the closest GP-B could get with a tolerable amount of atmospheric friction.</p> </tr> </table> [/code] perhaps you can tell me what the heck I did wrong? I think I did the table like I have all the others so far. Any help is appreciated! Genevieve<---that's me!! Wowzers! o.O Visit my cell! [url=http://faq.ozoneasylum.com/FaqWiki/shownode.php?id=754&sortby=rating]http://faq.ozoneasylum.com/FaqWiki/shownode.php?id=754&sortby=rating[/url]
Loading...
Options:
Enable Slimies
Enable Linkwords
« Backwards
—
Onwards »