Meteor Streaks Across Daytime Sky in Southeast States, Sparks Search After Breaking Up Over US

Residents across the Southeastern United States were captivated by an extraordinary celestial event when a meteor lit up the daytime sky this week, visible from North Carolina to Alabama. The American Meteor Society received around 250 reports of sightings following the incident. In the aftermath, emergency crews searched for potential crash sites, wiht a notable report from Henry County, Georgia, where fragments of the meteor reportedly crashed through a home’s roof and ceiling.

NASA confirmed that a significant portion of the meteor, which was about three feet in diameter and weighed over a ton, disintegrated upon entering the atmosphere, releasing energy comparable to the explosion of 20 tons of TNT. This created sonic booms that were so powerful they were mistaken by some residents for earthquakes. The event not onyl provided an awe-inspiring spectacle but also served as an chance for the public to learn more about meteoroids, meteors, and meteorites, emphasizing the distinction between the different stages of such celestial bodies.


Residents of the Southeastern U.S. got a rare look this week at a visitor from outer space when a meteor streaking across the daytime sky caused a spectacle visible from North Carolina to Alabama.

According to ABC News, the American Meteor Society said it received 250 reports of sightings of the object in the air after the incident Thursday.

Emergency crews fanned out in a search for the crash site on the ground.

Possible fragments from the meteor were reported at a home in Henry County, in north-central Georgia, according to ABC.

The U.S. National Weather Service passed along a report from the county’s emergency management agency indicating that a resident in one home had reported a “rock” came through the home’s ceiling about 12:30 p.m. — the time the fireball hit.

“We are presuming that a piece of the object fell through their roof. Henry County EMA also reported that the object broke through the roof, then the ceiling, before cracking the laminate on the floor and stopping,” a post on the page of the NWS office in Peachtree City, Georgia, states.

But that’s only one fragment of a rock estimated to have been three feet in diameter and weighing over a ton when it entered Earth’s atmosphere, according to ABC.

The disintegration of the rock created the fireball as well as an energy wave equivalent to the explosion of 20 tons of TNT, Bill Cooke, head of NASA’s Meteoroid Environments Office, said in a statement Friday, according to ABC.

“The resulting pressure wave propagated to the ground, creating booms heard by many in that area,” Cooke’s statement said, according to ABC.

The booms were strong enough that residents in some affected areas reported them as earthquakes.

Besides sonic booms and a spectacular, if vanishingly brief, sky show, the occurrence also provided an opportunity for Americans to brush up on their space vocabulary.

A “meteoroid” is a “small rocky or metallic object traveling through space,” ABC noted — or what the object on Thursday was before it reached Earth.

A meteoroid that enters Earth’s atmosphere and burns up is a “meteor,” according to ABC.

An object that makes it through the atmosphere and actually strikes the ground is a “meteorite.”




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