Pittsburgh New Years Day meteor explosion equivalent to 27 tonnes of TNT, says Nasa | Meteors

Publish date: 2020-07-31
Meteors This article is more than 2 years old

Pittsburgh New Year’s Day meteor explosion equivalent to 27 tonnes of TNT, says Nasa

This article is more than 2 years old

If not for clouds, the half-tonne fireball would have been easily visible in the day, maybe about 100 times the brightness of a full moon

A meteor that caused an earthshaking boom over suburban Pittsburgh on New Year’s Day exploded in the atmosphere with an energy blast equivalent to an estimated 27 tonnes of TNT, officials said.

The National Weather Service in Pittsburgh initially responded, suggesting the most likely explanation was a “meteor explosion” as people took to social media in search of answers.

Nasa’s Meteor Watch later confirmed the meteor blast in a Facebook post on Monday, saying a nearby infrasound station registered the blast wave from the meteor as it broke apart, causing sonic booms.

The data enabled an estimate of the energy released as equivalent to 27 tonnes of TNT.

The loud explosion heard over SW PA earlier may have been a meteor explosion. This GOES-16 GLM Total Optical Energy product shows a flash that was not associated with lightning. No confirmation, but this is the most likely explanation at this time. pic.twitter.com/ArtHCEA1RT

— NWS Pittsburgh (@NWSPittsburgh) January 1, 2022

“If we make a reasonable assumption as to the meteor’s speed (45,000mph, or 72,400km/h), we can ballpark the object’s size at about a yard in diameter, with a mass close to half a tonne,” the agency said.

If not for the cloudy weather, it said, the fireball would have been easily visible in the daytime sky – maybe about 100 times the brightness of the full moon.

National Weather Service meteorologist Shannon Hefferan told the Tribune-Review that satellite data recorded a flash over Washington County shortly before 11.30am on Saturday and officials believed it was due to a meteor “falling through the atmosphere”. Hefferan said a similar event occurred on 17 September in Hardy County, West Virginia.

Nasa Meteor Watch Pittsburgh on New Year’s Day Photograph: NASA Meteor Watch

Residents in South Hills and other areas reported hearing a loud noise and feeling their homes shaking and rattling. Allegheny County officials said they had confirmed that there was no seismic activity and no thunder and lightning.

“[It] was such a loud boom and shook my house in Verona. Grabbed my dog as we were both startled … thought earthquake, train derailment or big crash on turnpike behind my house,” one person wrote in response to the blast.

“We seen and heard it here in Southwest Ohio we saw a huge flash and approximately three or four seconds later a huge boom it literally shook our house I thought someone did light some dynamite,” another man added.

My security cameras caught the "boom" sound too. It was LOUD pic.twitter.com/NEhynXQIbP

— Dobie Tanpaw (@lildobe) January 1, 2022

This article was amended on 5 January 2022 to correct the estimated amount of TNT from 30 tonnes to 27 tonnes (the approximate metric equivalent of 30 US tons).

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