Fireball meteor blazes over Statue of Liberty amid reported loud boom (2024)

NASA reports that a screaming,34,000 mile-per-hour meteor blazed past the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor onTuesday, incinerating itself above the city.

New Yorkers and even the residents of nearby states reported feeling an earthquake-like rumble and hearinga loud 'boom' Tuesday morning — as the bright and plunging fireball burned itself into oblivion an estimated 29 miles above midtown Manhattan.

Multiple government agencies leapt into action to identify the mysterious, rattling explosion, including NASA's Meteoroid Environments Office and the United States Geological Survey's (USGS) National Earthquake Information Center.

But NASA noted there was evidence for an alternative explanation.

'There are reports of military in the vicinity around the time of the fireball,' the space agency said, 'which could explain the shaking and sounds reported to the media.'

NASA reports that a screaming, 34,000 mile-per-hour meteor blazed past the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor on Tuesday, incinerating itself above the city. New Yorkers and even the residents of nearby states reported feeling earthquake-like rumbles and hearing a loud 'boom'

But NASA noted there was evidence for an alternative explanation. 'There are reports of military in the vicinity around the time of the fireball,' the US space agency said, 'which could explain the shaking and sounds reported to the media'

Despite NASA's caveat, however, Pentagon officials told NBC New York that neither the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), nor any other US military sensor network, had tracked anything that could explain the witness reports.

Astronomer and lead for NASA's Meteoroid Environments Office,Bill Cooke, issued a statement on the limited facts about the event that are currently known.

According to Cooke, thedaylight fireball was first spotted at 11:17am local time near Greenville Yard, a freight rail yard located at the Port of New York and New Jersey.

'The fireball was first sighted at an altitude of 49 miles above Upper Bay (east of Greenville Yard),' Cooke said.

'The meteor descended at a steep angle of just 18 degrees from vertical,' he continued, 'movinga bit east of North at 34,000 miles per hour.'

The NASA official thanked amateur sky-watchers with the American Meteor Society whose data 'permitted a very crude determination of the trajectory of the meteor.'

Trackers with the nonprofit scientific group, founded in 1911, noted as many as20 possible meteor sightings between 11:16 and 11:20 am. The society's unconfirmed fireball reports were spread across the tri-state area, fromNew Jersey, New York and Connecticut— and beyond into Delaware and Maryland.

'It just caught my eye: a fireball just streaming through the sky,' eyewitness Judah Bergman told local news. 'I couldn't believe it.'

Astronomer and lead for NASA's Meteoroid Environments Office, Bill Cooke, said the daylight fireball was first spotted at 11:17am local time near Greenville Yard, a freight rail yard located at the Port of New York and New Jersey:'moving a bit east of North at 34,000 miles per hour'

'It just caught me eye: a fireball just streaming through the sky,' eyewitness Judah Bergman told the local NBC news affiliate. 'I couldn't believe it.' Above, a still from the 1998 film Armageddon, in which space rocks threaten the Earth, including the city of New York

Despite resident accounts of physical rattling and shaking along the fireball's path— reportedly from northeast New Jersey and Staten Island, New York — the USGS stated in an official statement that it recorded no evidence of an earthquake.

'An examination of the seismic data in the area showed no evidence of an earthquake. The USGS has no direct evidence of the source of the shaking,' the federal agency's National Earthquake Information Center said.

'Past reports of shaking with no associated seismic signal have had atmospheric origins,' the USGS advised, 'such as sonic booms or weather-related phenomena.'

One explanation for the presumed or alleged meteor's notably loud and earthshaking racket may have stemmed from the unusually thick summer air.

As the chief meteorologist for local affiliateWABC-TV, Lee Goldberg, noted, this July's record heat would help sound reverberate through the air.

Read More NASA analyzing mysterious flash and sonic boom over Minnesota that is 'too horizontal' to be a meteor

During high temperature days, airmolecules move more quickly and collide more frequently in their heated or 'excited' state— which allows the sound waves that ripple through these molecular collisions to spread more quickly and more powerfully.

NASA officials cautioned that its own assessment of the fireball sightings this Tuesday was 'uncertain' and based on only 'a few eyewitness accounts.'

'There is no camera or satellite data currently available to refine the solution,' the space agency's meteoroid office acknowledged.

Cooke's team at this NASA office, however, vowed tocontinue gathering information in order to confirm these witness reports, so as to finalize its investigation of the case.

No meteorite impacts or landings, at least according to NASA, were produced by Tuesday's event.

Fireball meteor blazes over Statue of Liberty amid reported loud boom (2024)

FAQs

Fireball meteor blazes over Statue of Liberty amid reported loud boom? ›

"The boom may have been caused by a fireball"

What was that loud boom just now in 2024? ›

NASA estimates meteor originated over NYC

Turns out the source of the loud boom and explosion-like sound was a daylight fireball over New York City around 11:17 a.m. on Tuesday, according to NASA Meteor Watch.

Was there a meteor in New York? ›

A meteor crashed into Earth's atmosphere over New York City yesterday (July 16), putting on quite the show for spectators throughout the region. The meteor created a rare daytime fireball that traveled west into New Jersey at speeds of up to 38,000 mph (61,000 km/h) according to NASA Meteor Watch.

When did sonic booms end? ›

An Air Force B-58 Hustler supersonic bomber like this one was one of many military jets used during the 1960s to generate sonic booms over U.S. cities to see how the public would react to the sound. The research helped lead to a ban on civilian faster-than-sound flight over land beginning in 1973.

What is the biggest booms ever? ›

The strongest sonic boom ever recorded was 7,000 Pa (144 psf) and it did not cause injury to the researchers who were exposed to it. The boom was produced by an F-4 flying just above the speed of sound at an altitude of 100 feet (30 m).

What is the largest meteor to hit the United States? ›

Barringer Meteor Crater is the largest impact crater yet discovered in the United States. The impact occurred approximately 50,000 years ago from a meteor weighing several hundred thousand tons.

What ancient city was destroyed by a meteor? ›

We present evidence that in ~ 1650 BCE (~ 3600 years ago), a cosmic airburst destroyed Tall el-Hammam, a Middle-Bronze-Age city in the southern Jordan Valley northeast of the Dead Sea.

Where is the meteor that hit Earth? ›

The Chicxulub crater (IPA: [t͡ʃikʃuˈluɓ] cheek-shoo-LOOB) is an impact crater buried underneath the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico. Its center is offshore, but the crater is named after the onshore community of Chicxulub Pueblo (not the larger coastal town of Chicxulub Puerto).

What is the loud sound coming from the sky? ›

Skyquakes are enigmatic sounds, typically described as a very loud boom or trumpet-sounding noise that has no apparent cause and seems to come from the sky. Their sound is like distant, but very loud, thunder with no clouds in the sky, large enough to generate lightning.

Why did I hear a sonic boom? ›

It is caused by an object moving faster than sound -- about 750 miles per hour at sea level. An aircraft traveling through the atmosphere continuously produces air-pressure waves similar to the water waves caused by a ship's bow.

What were the booms heard in NJ? ›

Loud boom in NJ, NYC: NASA estimates that meteor entered the atmosphere, disintegrated above the city - ABC7 New York.

Is sonic boom still going? ›

Season 1 of Sonic Boom was released in Japan as a Netflix exclusive on July 1, 2017, under the title Sonic Toon (ソニックトゥーン). As of May 21, 2020, there are no plans to continue the show past its two-season run.

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