If something's hitting your spaceship, you're probably already screwed. A peanut in Earth's orbit can hit a space station with the equivalent force of a 50. Bullet
Interestingly, because throughout the history of manned space exploration waste management (human waste that is) has largely consisted of dumping it overboard (or however we are supposed to refer to it on a spaceship), the most common thing you're likely to be hit by in low Earth orbit is shit travel in excess of 30,000 miles an hour. Frozen solid into something much like extremely unhygienic steel. This actually causes damage in the millions each year to satellites.
Yeah, the international space station has had quite a few close calls, and has nearly had to evacuate many times. Commercial satellites on the other hand.... Beooooooooooowww *Boom*
Interesting, if this is indeed true. However, I have some skepticism about it's actual strength.
It's as strong as metal, they say, but what kind of metal? Is there some sort of comparison? Is it comparable to high quality steel? Copper? Sodium? They also tried to claim that spiderwebs were stronger than steel, but that's hardly the whole truth, and very misleading.
I think a comparison with pottasium (soft metal), copper (the compromise) and iron (hard metal) would be nicer. Just 'cus metals like steel are peculiar alloys, and that makes things rather confuzzling when people start pouting atom ratios.
Also, they didn't claim spider
webs are stronger than steel, they said spider
silk was. And they're right. Gram for gram, spider silk is stronger than steel (except maybe a carbon heavy steel alloy, I don't know then).
Me being helpful :31 kilograms of rocks = 1 kilograms of feathers