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with bits and bobs
They collided and stuck together.
he done it by getting bits and putting them together.
This would happen, space junk could collide with asteroids, but most space junk is close to the earth, away from the main asteroid belt. It would be more likely to collide with meteroids and other bits of space junk.
No nation owns the moon. The 1967 treaty named the Treaty on Principles Governing the Activities of States in the Exploration and Use of Outer Space, including the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies, (also known as the Outer Space Treaty) explicitly forbids any government from claiming a celestial resource such as the Moon or a planet, claiming that they are the common heritage of man
fit bits of metal together with rivits
Bits of rock from outer space entering our atmosphere.
Bits Of Metal are useful for Tinkering and Trading.
You can find Bits of Metal at The Silver Trees Wilderness.
little bits of fur
NO BUT....In outer space, metal objects don't rust exactly like they do on earth, but something similar to rusting can occur in space. On earth, metal rusts when the iron atoms in the metal interact with water molecules. These interactions break the chemical bonds that hold the atoms in the metal together, and at the same time allow the atoms in the metal to form new bonds with oxygen atoms and/or water molecules, producing the red, crumbly material we know as rust. This material is actually a combination of metal atoms and oxygen atoms, so metal cannot rust on its own; oxygen or water needs to be added to it. In the vacuum of outer space, there is very little water or oxygen. A metal object therefore cannot rust in space like it would on Earth. However, even in outer space there are still a few oxygen atoms around. Also, in space there are some types of light (called ultraviolet light) that can break chemical bonds between atoms (most of this ultraviolet light doesn't reach us here on the ground because it can't pass through the Earth's atmosphere). When these atoms and ultraviolet light strike metal in space, they can produce some of the same combinations of metal and oxygen atoms found in rust. Because the density of atoms in outer space is very low, it takes many years for much of this "rust" to form on any object. We can get a sense of just how slowly things rust in space by looking at iron meteorites, chunks of metal that have fallen to earth from outer space, Before they crash-landed on earth, these bits of metal drifted around the solar system for millions or even billions of years, and yet for the most part they are still chunks of pure metal with little rust. Even so, the small amount of rust formed on metal objects in outer space can be important because it changes the color and texture of the objects' surface. These surface changes happen not only to metal objects, but to rocks as well, and they need to be taken into account if scientists want to figure out what objects in outer space are made of based on how they look through telescopes.
HSS bits or Carbide bits will do fine
The Outer Limits - 1995 Bits of Love 3-1 was released on: USA: 19 January 1997
address space=24bits => (2 Power 24)=16M words
as long as they got there bits together in the tree as long as they got there bits together in the tree as long as they got there bits together in the tree
with bits and bobs
Magnatite.