
Meteor causes thunderous boom over Ohio and Pennsylvania
NBC News
A loud boom heard and felt widely across parts of Ohio and Pennsylvania on Tuesday was likely the result of a meteor.
A thunderous boom heard and felt widely across northeastern Ohio and parts of Pennsylvania on Tuesday morning was most likely the result of a meteor.
Area residents took to social media, describing what they heard as “the loudest boom,” “a few sonic booms” and “rumbling.” Others reported seeing a fireball and a bright streak flash across the sky just before 9 a.m. ET.
The Pittsburgh office of the National Weather Service posted a dramatic video on X, captured by one of its employees, showing a fireball with a long tail hurtling across a cloudless sky.
The weather service in Cleveland, meanwhile, shared imagery from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s GOES-19 satellite, saying: “The latest GLM imagery (1301Z) does suggest that the boom was a result of a meteor.”
The American Meteor Society, which tracks fireball events around the world, had 140 eyewitness reports for Tuesday’s meteor across the Midwest and the Northeast. The reports came from people in 10 states — including Illinois, Kentucky and New York — as well as Washington, D.C., and the Canadian province of Ontario.

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