Science | spacewalk Space Junk to Hit Earth Tomorrow Ammonia tank chucked from ISS expected to break up in atmosphere By Rob Quinn Posted Nov 1, 2008 3:07 AM CDT Copied Space station crew member Clayton Anderson, left, and astronaut Rick Mastracchio, top, work outside the space station during a space walk Wednesday, Aug. 15, 2007. (AP Photo/NASA TV) NASA is tracking a fridge-sized chunk of space trash expected to plunge to Earth tomorrow night, Space.com reports. The ammonia tank was thrown overboard from the International Space Station over a year ago and has been slowly descending since. NASA says it's highly unlikely that anybody will impacted by the debris but people should be wary of any strange objects they find. "It is a large object and pieces will enter and we just need to be cautious," NASA's space station program manager said. "If anybody found a piece of anything on the ground Monday morning, I would hope they wouldn't get too close to it." The tank—the biggest piece of trash ever jettisoned from the station—was thrown overboard after engineers planned a route that would minimize the risk to spacecraft and to Earthlings below. Read These Next Iran's new supreme leader is said to already have war wounds. Warning to Trump on Iran: Don't 'get eliminated yourself.' Another administration official apparently moves to a military base. One critical island in Iran has remained unscathed in airstrikes. Report an error