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A meteor travelling at nearly 75,000 miles per hour (120,700 km/h) exploded high above the northeastern United States on Saturday, unleashing a powerful sonic boom that rattled homes, shook buildings and sparked alarm across several states before scientists confirmed the source of the mysterious blast.
Residents from Massachusetts and Rhode Island to New Hampshire reported hearing what many initially believed was an explosion, earthquake or military-related event. Emergency services were inundated with calls as startled residents described windows rattling, houses shaking, and a loud “double boom” echoing across the region.
Within hours, investigators from NASA, the American Meteor Society (AMS), the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and meteorologists analysing satellite data determined the cause: a meteor roughly three feet (one meter) in diameter that violently fragmented in Earth’s atmosphere approximately 40 miles (64 km) above northeastern Massachusetts and southeastern New Hampshire.
A Cosmic Visitor Ends In A Violent Airburst:
According to NASA, the meteor entered Earth’s atmosphere at approximately 2:06 p.m. local time and was travelling at an extraordinary speed of around 75,000 mph when it broke apart. The resulting airburst released energy equivalent to roughly 300 tons of TNT, generating shock waves powerful enough to be felt across much of New England.
NASA officials stressed that the object was a naturally occurring meteor and not a piece of re-entering space debris or a defunct satellite.
“This fireball was not associated with any currently active meteor shower, but it was a natural object and not a re-entry of space debris or a satellite,” NASA said.
The explosion was so energetic that it was detected by NOAA’s GOES-19 weather satellite, whose lightning-mapping instruments captured the flash as the object disintegrated in the upper atmosphere.
Scientists classify such events as “bolides”, particularly bright meteors that explode before reaching the ground. While small meteors enter Earth’s atmosphere every day, only a tiny fraction are large enough to generate sonic booms audible over populated areas.
“The House Shook”:
Across New England, confusion quickly spread.
Police departments throughout Massachusetts reported receiving numerous calls from concerned residents trying to identify the source of the blast. Authorities initially investigated whether the sound might have been linked to industrial accidents, earthquakes, severe weather or military activity.
In the town of Wrentham, Massachusetts, Police Chief Bill McGrath said the boom was felt throughout the region.
“The explosion was heard and felt throughout New England, shaking homes and causing many people to be justifiably concerned,” McGrath said.
Social media platforms are rapidly filled with videos and eyewitness accounts.
Many residents described hearing two distinct booms in quick succession. Others reported pets becoming distressed and furniture vibrating inside their homes. Witnesses from Rhode Island, Massachusetts and New Hampshire compared the sound to nearby thunder, a gas explosion or a heavy vehicle colliding with a building.
One Rhode Island resident wrote online that the blast was so intense they briefly believed a vehicle had struck their house. Another reported feeling their entire home tremble.
Reports eventually stretched from Delaware to Montreal, illustrating how widely the atmospheric shock wave travelled.
Satellite Data Solves The Mystery:
Meteorologists were among the first to suspect a meteor.
NBC meteorologist Pamela Gardner pointed to unusual readings from NOAA’s Geostationary Lightning Mapper, which detected a sudden atmospheric flash despite no thunderstorms being present.
“There is no lightning in this current storm, no earthquake from USGS,” Gardner noted as investigators began analysing the event.
Meanwhile, WBZ-TV Chief Meteorologist Eric Fisher explained that meteors often appear on lightning-mapping systems because of the intense energy released as they explode.
“Basically, when it enters the atmosphere and explodes, it shows up as lightning,” Fisher explained while reviewing the satellite data.
The U.S. Geological Survey also moved quickly to rule out seismic activity.
Although hundreds of residents submitted “Did You Feel It?” reports to USGS systems, no earthquake was detected on the agency’s seismographs. Scientists concluded that the shaking experienced by residents originated in the atmosphere rather than underground.
Did Any Meteorites Reach The Ground?
At present, scientists believe most, or all, of the meteor likely burned up during fragmentation.
Robert Lunsford, a program monitor with the American Meteor Society, said the object appeared significantly larger than a typical fireball but was still unlikely to have survived atmospheric entry intact.
“It was definitely bigger than a normal fireball,” Lunsford said, estimating it measured roughly a yard across. He added that if any fragments survived, they most likely fell into the Atlantic Ocean rather than populated areas.
Authorities have reported no injuries, property damage or hazardous debris resulting from the event.
Why Are People Hearing More Meteor Booms?
The Massachusetts airburst is the latest in a series of unusually prominent meteor events reported during 2026.
Scientists have noted several large fireballs and sonic-boom-producing meteors over North America during the first months of the year, including notable events over Ohio and Texas. While researchers are examining whether reporting rates have increased, experts caution against assuming Earth faces any heightened impact threat. Some researchers suggest improved detection systems, smartphone cameras, satellite monitoring and public awareness may explain part of the apparent increase in reports.
The American Meteor Society has acknowledged that the first quarter of 2026 has seen a noticeable rise in reported fireball events compared with recent years, though researchers stress that further analysis is required before drawing conclusions about changes in the near-Earth meteoroid environment.
Rare But Not Unprecedented:
Although dramatic, experts emphasise that Saturday’s event remains part of a natural and ongoing process occurring throughout the solar system.
Every day, Earth encounters tons of cosmic debris. Most objects are tiny and burn up harmlessly in the atmosphere. Larger meteors capable of producing daylight fireballs and sonic booms are far rarer, particularly over densely populated regions where millions of people can witness the event simultaneously.
The Massachusetts airburst nevertheless offered a striking reminder that Earth remains exposed to a constant stream of extraterrestrial material. While this meteor posed no danger, its explosive breakup, equivalent to hundreds of tons of TNT, demonstrated how even relatively small objects can generate significant shock waves when they collide with Earth’s atmosphere at cosmic speeds.
For a few moments on Saturday afternoon, what began as a mysterious boom that sent residents searching for explanations turned out to be something far more extraordinary: a brief encounter with a visitor from space.
Source: Veritas Press C.I.C. | Multi News Agencies
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