Spaceflight Now by Stephen Clark May 9, 2020
A Chinese rocket measuring around 100 feet long that launched earlier this month will likely plunge back into Earth’s atmosphere some time Monday, becoming the most massive object in decades to fall out of orbit in an uncontrolled manner.
The core stage of China’s Long March 5B rocket is expected to fall back to Earth unguided after nearly a week in orbit. The Long March 5B rocket launched May 5 with a prototype for a next-generation Chinese crew capsule.
As of Saturday, the rocket stage was circling Earth in an elliptical orbit ranging between 94 miles (152 kilometers) and 167 miles (270 kilometers) in altitude, according to U.S. military tracking data. A prediction issued Saturday by the U.S. military, which tracks objects in orbit, forecasts the rocket’s re-entry in a 24-hour period between 2335 GMT (7:35 p.m. EDT) Sunday and 2335 GMT (7:35 p.m. EDT) Monday.
More:
https://spaceflightnow.com/2020/05/09/u-s-military-tracking-large-chinese-rocket-reentry/
File photo of a Long March 5 core stage on a previous mission. Credit: Xinhua

This map illustrates some of the possible tracks the Long March 5B rocket body could take on Monday, the expected day of
re-entry. An exact location of the re-entry cannot be predicted with certainty. Credit: Aerospace Corp.