Updated

Here’s one extraterrestrial express bus you’ll be glad you missed: An asteroid named 2019 AE3 will pass by Earth on Thursday morning, Jan. 2.

NASA says the space rock is between 32 and 71 feet long, or roughly the size of a city bus, and zooming through the cosmos at 18,400 miles per hour.

'ANCIENT STAR BURST' SPOTTED AT THE CENTER OF THE MILKY WAY

Fortunately, the Near Earth Object (NEO) won’t come too near to Earth. The closest it is expected to get is four lunar distances -- about 1 million miles – at approximately 9 a.m. EST. Tracking is available on The Sky Live, which calculates that 2019 AE3 will technically be visible from New York City between around 1 a.m. and 10 a.m.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The event is set to occur just three days after five sizeable NEOs flew by Earth on the same day. The largest was taller than the Statue of Liberty and came within 3.1 million miles of the planet, according to The Sun, while another similar in size to 2019 AE3 practically skimmed it just 415,000 miles away.