NASA Confirms What Really Caused That Boom in Boston
It sounded like an explosion. For some, it felt like one.
Just after 2 p.m. on May 30, residents across Massachusetts-and well beyond-were jolted by a sudden, thunderous boom that rattled homes and shook windows.
Phones lit up. Emergency lines flooded. And for a brief moment, nobody knew what had just happened.
What they were experiencing wasn't a crack of thunder or an earthquake. And it wasn't an industrial blast or a military exercise.
No. It was a meteor screaming through Earth's atmosphere at 75,000 miles per hour-and detonating midair.
What Actually Happened Over New England
According to NASA, the object was a "fireball" meteor that entered the atmosphere over northeastern Massachusetts and southeastern New Hampshire around 2:06 p.m. local time.
In a statement explaining the event, the agency said:
#MeteorSighting: Eyewitnesses in New England and @NOAA's GOES-19 satellite reported a bright fireball on Saturday, May 30, at 2:06 p.m EDT accompanied by a loud noise. The meteor appears to have fragmented at an altitude of 40 miles over northeast MA and southeast NH. The energy…
— NASA Space Alerts (@NASASpaceAlerts) May 30, 2026
That kind of energy release is massive.
It doesn't create a ground explosion-but it does create a shockwave strong enough to reach the surface as a sonic boom, which is exactly what people heard.
NASA also made clear this wasn't space junk or anything human-made: "This fireball was not associated with any currently active meteor shower… it was a natural object and not a re-entry of space debris or a satellite."
What People Heard-and Felt
For those on the ground, the experience was immediate and intense.
Across eastern Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and parts of New Hampshire, people reported:
- A loud, sudden bang-or two quick blasts
- Windows rattling and houses shaking
- Vibrations strong enough to feel through the ground
Some initially thought it was thunder or a nearby accident. Others feared something more serious.
One user on X reported that they thought a tree had fallen nearby as it "shook the house when it happened." Another agreed: "In East Watertown, we heard a very loud boom and the house shook. I thought a tree fell on the roof."
Lynnfield, MA pic.twitter.com/5NkY1HO6rI
— вяєтт (@iambrettp) May 30, 2026
Police departments reported being flooded with calls, as residents across the region tried to figure out what had just happened.
A Fireball Seen Across Multiple States
While many only heard the boom, others actually saw the meteor streak across the sky-a bright, fast-moving fireball visible even in daylight.
The American Meteor Society received dozens of reports stretching from Delaware to Canada, with witnesses describing what looked like a "shooting star in the daytime sky."
WATCH: 3-foot wide meteor enters atmosphere near Massachusetts and New Hampshire border causing loud boom over Boston pic.twitter.com/rP1uJHIKTj
— Rapid Report (@RapidReport2025) May 31, 2026
Scientists from the American Meteor Society estimated the space rock was about 3 feet wide (nearly a meter, or the length of a baseball bat or the width of a standard door), large enough to survive deeper into the atmosphere before breaking apart.
Why It Sounded Like an Explosion
Meteors hit Earth's atmosphere at extreme speeds-often tens of thousands of miles per hour. As they slam into the air, they compress it violently, generating powerful pressure waves, similar to a supersonic jet.
When a larger object like this one breaks apart, those waves intensify and can travel miles, eventually reaching the ground as a sonic boom.
That's why this event sounded-and even felt-like an explosion, despite occurring 40 miles above the Earth's surface.
Was Anyone Hurt?
Despite the intensity of the boom, officials confirmed:
- No injuries
- No confirmed damage
- No ongoing public safety threat
The Bottom Line
A 3-foot-wide rock from space, moving faster than a fighter jet, exploded overhead with the force of hundreds of tons of TNT-yet never touched the ground.
And for a few seconds on a Saturday afternoon, it turned the sky into something straight out of a movie-leaving behind nothing but a shockwave, a mystery, and one unforgettable boom.
This story was originally published by Men's Journal on May 31, 2026, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Men's Journal as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
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This story was originally published May 31, 2026 at 11:20 AM.