The weekend news events in 2026 have certainly been… interesting.
A meteor entered the atmosphere just north of Boston early Saturday afternoon, produced a very loud sonic boom heard across much of eastern Massachusetts and New England, and likely exploded over or just off the Massachusetts coast.
There are no reports of damage or impact so far.
It was heard around 2:11 p.m. Eastern Time, with people describing a sudden bang that rattled windows, startled pets, and even shook some homes. Dozens of phone calls came into the WBZ-TV newsroom reporting a loud explosion heard around Boston, as far as Ipswich and Johnston, Rhode Island.According to preliminary reports submitted to the American Meteor Society, dozens of people across the Northeast reported seeing the fireball around 2 p.m. Saturday. Sightings stretched across multiple states, helping scientists piece together the meteor’s path through the atmosphere.Satellite lightning data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration showed a signature consistent with a meteor around the same time the boom was reported. The data also showed that the meteor probably entered the atmosphere over the South Shore near Boston. There are no reports of where the meteor landed.Most meteors burn up harmlessly in the atmosphere, but larger objects can occasionally survive long enough to create the brilliant fireballs and booming shock waves that grab people’s attention.
The “bolide” (i.e., exceptionally bright fireball) was estimated to be 3 feet wide.
Robert Lunsford, the Fireball Program Monitor with the society, told the Associated Press that the group received dozens of reports from Delaware to Montreal with people either hearing the double boom, feeling the ground shake or seeing the fireball — which he said looks like a shooting star in the daytime sky.“It was definitely bigger than a normal fireball, about a yard wide,” he said.Lunsford said it’s unlikely the meteor struck the ground.
The skies have been putting on quite a show this year. In March, a 7-ton meteor flew across the skies of Ohio. Subsequently, Ohioans went on a hunt for meteorite fragments, which can be valued at up to $ 1,000 per gram.
It’s a good thing to note that NASA’s asteroid deflection test, DART, was a bit more successful than originally thought.
In 2022, NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft deliberately smashed into the small moon Dimorphos — which orbits the larger asteroid Didymos — after travelling 10 months to reach the binary asteroid system.The mission to the region about 11 million kilometres from Earth was a success: scientists found the hit from the spacecraft shortened Dimorphos’s orbit around Didymos by around 32 minutes.And a new study published in Science Advances reports an additional effect: the collision slightly altered the pair’s trajectory around the sun.Rahil Makadia, the study’s lead author and a planetary defence scientist from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, said the findings are a major step forward in protecting our planet.“We don’t need to blow the asteroids up,” he said. “If we just give it a tiny shove well in advance, then we can potentially push a threatening asteroid clear of the Earth.”
The New England bolide offers a timely reminder that Earth is part of an active cosmic environment, where even relatively small objects can generate significant atmospheric shockwaves and public alarm. And, as I have mentioned before, even larger objects can result in real global climate change.
I can’t wait to see what the remainder of the year brings in terms of explosions and pyrotechnics.
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