NASA’s got its eyes glued to a 100-foot space rock nicknamed “2026 CC” barreling toward us at a zippy 22,000 mph, set to buzz by tomorrow at about 379,000 miles—roughly moon-plus-a-bit distance. No need to panic-buy canned goods just yet; it’s not hitting us, but it’s close enough to make you double-check your homeowner’s insurance for “asteroid” clauses. While doomsday headlines love to hype these flybys, NASA calmly reminds everyone most near-Earth objects are just cosmic drive-bys, not Armageddon on wheels—er, orbit.

NASA Tracking Plane-Sized Asteroid Approaching Earth Tomorrow