The New England event came just days after a bright meteor was reported over Western New York during the early morning hours of May 27.
That loud boom and bright flash that woke many across Western New York early Wednesday? Scientists say it came from space.
A meteor exploded over New England Saturday afternoon, creating a daytime fireball and a massive “double boom” that shook local homes. The American Meteor Society reported the space rock puncture the ...
Residents reported a sharp boom and shaking homes after a meteor fragmented high over New England, NASA said.
NBC Boston meteorologist Pamela Gardner says it was likely a meteorite entering and exploding in our atmosphere. “There’s a satellite lighting detection around Boston -but no lightning! No earthquakes ...
The USGS noted the event was a "widely felt sonic boom from a suspected bolide," referring to a meteor that explodes in the atmosphere.
A powerful meteor exploded high over Massachusetts and New Hampshire, creating a loud sonic boom heard across New England and New York.
Footage from a satellite confirmed that a May 30 sonic boom heard over the northeastern US was from a meteor, NASA stated.
The American Meteor Society said a boom heard by residents in multiple states Saturday afternoon was a 3-foot wide meteor entering the atmosphere near the Massachusetts and New Hampshire border.
A fiery object disintegrated as it fell off the coast of Boston, causing a series of sonic booms that could be heard in numerous towns and cities across the state. Eric Fisher, chief meteorologist ...
A daytime meteor exploded high over New England on Saturday, producing a loud boom heard across much of eastern Massachusetts and leaving evidence that fragments likely splashed down in Cape Cod Bay.