No, because the chance of being hit (1 in 2,000) during the specified forecast remains the same. It’ll cover all of the continents. Just keep an eye out for the future predictions as they come available. As the window narrows they’ll be able to pinpoint the time a little more accurately. Whether anyone sees it re-enter the atmosphere is another story.
Thanks for answering my post. I just noticed that DFW(where we live) is right under one of the ground tracks. We were right under Columbia when it broke apart and heard sonic booms as it re-entered. My husband and I were having coffee and a few minutes after we heard the booms, it broke on the news that it had blown up.
I did find this nifty little tracker just now:
It’s near Cuba right now.
Actually..that was the wrong satellite.Here is the tracker for ROsat:
It is passing near Hawaii now.