Rare asteroid wider than Manhattan will make a close approach to Earth
Don’t space out or you’ll miss it.
A once-in-a-generation asteroid broader than the width of Manhattan will be passing by the Earth — and there’s a chance you can see it for yourself.
The space rock 877 Alinda, one of the five largest expected to safely but closely zoom past our planet this century, flew by about 7.6 million miles away on Wednesday. It will linger around for the next week or so.

However, according to Forbes, Sunday is the optimal day to see the two-and-a-half-mile-wide near-Earth asteroid discovered in 1918.
Still, you will need some help from a “modest” pair of binoculars as its projected 9.4 magnitude for Sunday isn’t bright enough for the naked eye, Virtual Telescope Project astronomer Gianluca Masi wrote.