A huge boom reverberated around suburban Pittsburgh on New Year's Day, rattling homes and confusing residents. Community members and officials were were stumped. There was no seismic activity, no thunderstorm or any obvious signs of a detonation.
On resident tweeted security footage of the boom.
The National Weather Service confirmed that satellite data recorded a flash over Washington County shortly before 11:30 a.m., but agreed there was no thunderstorm or earthquake. Finally they tweeted its theory: An exploding meteor.
Exploding meteors, also called airbursts, are a kind of cosmic traffic accident when a larger piece of space rock collides with the Earth's atmosphere and explodes. A major one took place almost a decade ago in Russia, shattering windows and knocking over buildings.
One thing is for sure, at least for residents in Pittsburgh: 2022 started off with a bang.
2025-04-19 21:151497 view
2025-04-19 21:081018 view
2025-04-19 20:39545 view
2025-04-19 20:032147 view
2025-04-19 19:562091 view
2025-04-19 19:381955 view
The Mega Millions jackpot for Friday's drawing has risen to $398 million after no one won the big pr
Kendall Jenner is proving that blondes have more fun in her own style.Two weeks after ditching her s
UNCASVILLE, Conn. — With four minutes left in what would become the last game in one of the most rem