[education/kstars] doc: Fix links in documentation
Yuri Chornoivan
null at kde.org
Thu Jan 11 07:28:28 GMT 2024
Git commit 5d6ed6b40b105f5d8ff826951d8ea766f7e88af8 by Yuri Chornoivan.
Committed on 11/01/2024 at 08:28.
Pushed by yurchor into branch 'master'.
Fix links in documentation
M +2 -2 doc/ekos-capture.docbook
https://invent.kde.org/education/kstars/-/commit/5d6ed6b40b105f5d8ff826951d8ea766f7e88af8
diff --git a/doc/ekos-capture.docbook b/doc/ekos-capture.docbook
index 6d8ee36371..6d6a5edcea 100644
--- a/doc/ekos-capture.docbook
+++ b/doc/ekos-capture.docbook
@@ -545,8 +545,8 @@ Approaches to imaging can vary greatly in the selection of exposure times, and n
<listitem>
<para>
<guilabel>Sky Quality</guilabel>: The <guimenu>Sky Quality selector</guimenu> sets the measurement of the magnitude per square arc-second of the background sky.</para>
- <para>The range for Sky Quality is from 22 for the darkest skies, to 16 for the brightest (most light-polluted) skies. The magnitude scale is non-linear; it is a logarithmic scale based on the 5th root of 100. So 5 steps on the scale represent a change in brightness by a factor of 100. (A Sky Quality of 17 is 100 times as bright as a Sky Quality of 22. Each full integer step on the scale is a change by a factor of approximately 2.512.). <ulink url= "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sky_brightness">Wikipedia Sky Brightness</ulink>
-<ulink url= "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_pollution">Wikipedia Light Pollution</ulink></para>
+ <para>The range for Sky Quality is from 22 for the darkest skies, to 16 for the brightest (most light-polluted) skies. The magnitude scale is non-linear; it is a logarithmic scale based on the 5th root of 100. So 5 steps on the scale represent a change in brightness by a factor of 100. (A Sky Quality of 17 is 100 times as bright as a Sky Quality of 22. Each full integer step on the scale is a change by a factor of approximately 2.512.). <ulink url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sky_brightness">Wikipedia Sky Brightness</ulink>
+<ulink url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_pollution">Wikipedia Light Pollution</ulink></para>
<para>
All light scattered in the background sky is considered to be light pollution regardless of its source, so the effects of moonlight should be considered as "natural" light pollution. But weather conditions can also impact Sky Quality, as humidity or cloud cover can reflect and scatter any source of light through the atmosphere</para>
<para>
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