Rare ‘daytime fireball’ meteor creates powerful sonic boom as 7-ton space rock explodes above eastern US

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An extremely rare meteor, a “daytime fireball,” was recently spotted streaking across the sunny blue skies of the eastern United States after a refrigerator-sized space rock exploded and triggered a powerful sonic boom. The unusual event, also visible from space, may have rained tiny meteor fragments onto the local area, experts say.

The 6-foot-wide asteroid entered Earth’s atmosphere Tuesday, March 17, around 8:57 a.m. EDT, and began burning in the sky over Lake Erie in northern Ohio at a speed of about 40,000 mph (64,400 km/h), according to a report. NASA report. The flaming space rock, which weighed about 7 tons (6.4 metric tons), then shattered about 30 miles (48 kilometers) above the town of Valley City, near Akron, creating a bright flash that lasted up to seven seconds.

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