Meteor Explosion Over Northeastern US Causes Sonic Boom Equivalent to 300 Tons of TNT - PRESS AI WORLD
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Meteor Explosion Over Northeastern US Causes Sonic Boom Equivalent to 300 Tons of TNT

Credited from: REUTERS

  • A meteor exploded over northeastern US, triggering a loud sonic boom.
  • The explosion's energy was equivalent to about 300 tons of TNT.
  • The meteor broke apart at approximately 40 miles above the ground.
  • Witnesses reported shaking buildings across New England.
  • No seismic activity was detected, ruling out an earthquake.

A meteor exploded over northeastern Massachusetts and southeastern New Hampshire on Saturday, May 30, creating a loud sonic boom equivalent to 300 tons of TNT. This explosion was reported at 2:06 p.m. EDT and was not associated with any active meteor shower, according to NASA's deputy news chief Jennifer Dooren. The object, traveling at about 75,000 mph, fragmented approximately 40 miles in the atmosphere, startling residents from Delaware to Montreal who heard the resulting booms and reported shaking buildings, according to Indiatimes and Reuters.

The meteor was about three feet wide when it entered the atmosphere. Reports from the American Meteor Society indicated that the fireball appeared significantly larger than typical meteors, leading to speculation that it would have burned up before hitting the ground. "Most of them do burn up before they hit the ground," said Robert Lunsford from the Society, adding that if any remnants existed, they may have landed in the ocean, according to Le Monde and Reuters.

The phenomenon was powerful enough that residents across the region reported the sensation to local authorities, prompting the US Geological Survey to receive multiple "Did you feel it?" inquiries. However, officials ruled out seismic activity as the cause, confirming instead that the noise and ground shaking were a result of the meteor's atmospheric breakup, according to Indiatimes, Reuters, and Le Monde.

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