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A Chinese space station is going to fall out of the sky this weekend. Here’s what it looks like.

It’s nearly impossible to predict where it’ll land, if it lands at all.

Researchers in Germany have concluded that the Chinese space station that’s likely to fall out of the sky this weekend won’t hit Germany.

But it could hit just about anywhere else.

Using a sophisticated radar imaging telescope, scientists at the Fraunhofer Institute for High Frequency Physics and Radar Techniques near Bonn, Germany, were able to capture images of the Tiangong-1 satellite, China’s first space station, which went up in 2011 and is set to fall out of orbit between March 30 and April 1, according to the European Space Agency.

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The station is currently orbiting Earth at 18,000 miles per hour, at an altitude of about 120 miles above our planet’s surface. It spins around the Earth about once every 90 minutes.

At that speed, it’s nearly impossible to predict where it’ll land, if it lands at all. (It could totally burn up and disintegrate as it re-enters the Earth’s atmosphere.) The best guess we have is that it will hit somewhere between the 43rd parallel North and the 43rd parallel South — a pretty big swath of the planet.

That’s anywhere between upstate New York and the southern tip of South America. All of Africa and Australia are fair game. Northern Europe, Canada, and most of Russia can rest easy.

Here are two images captured by the scientists at the Fraunhofer Institute:

Even for those within the satellite’s potential landing zone, the likelihood of any one person getting hit by a piece of space debris is essentially nil. Only one person is believed to ever have been struck by a piece of falling space debris, and even she was uninjured — she said it was like being hit by an empty can of soda.

And the Tiangong-1 isn’t nearly the largest piece of space debris to fall out of orbit. The Mir, a Soviet space station that dropped out of the sky in 2001, weighed about 130 tons when it fell. The Tiangong is tiny by comparison, weighing in at just under 10 tons.

More junk is set to fall out of the sky in the next couple months. Stargazers are on the lookout for the Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer, an even smaller satellite that was used to study white dwarfs, neutron stars, and black holes until it was switched off in 2012, which is expected to come down within the next few months.

Cover image: Models of the docking of the Tiangong-1 space module and the Shenzhou manned spacecraft are shown on display at a shopping mall in Nanjing city, east China's Jiangsu province, 27 September 2017.(Imaginechina via AP Images)