Anonymous ID: cde792 May 30, 2026, 4:31 p.m. No.24661750   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>1754 >>1945 >>1949 >>1977 >>2132 >>2186 >>2192 >>2210 >>2259 >>2330 >>2359 >>2526 >>2583

https://x.com/ExxAlerts/status/2060428167589027949?s=20

 

 

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@ExxAlerts

ยท

May 29

ALERT: Random โ€˜sonic boom' shocks thousands across multiple East Coast US states.

 

The random sonic boom, a loud explosion noise caused by an object breaking the sound barrier, was captured by Ring doorbells and surveillance footage in South Carolina.

 

There have also been reports of the boom being heard from North Carolina, Georgia, and Virginia.

 

Speculated to be a fighter jet or an asteroid striking the Earth's atmosphere, the military and NASA have both denied either of those events.

 

The US Geological Survey, which tracks earthquakes, has confirmed that a large sonic boom was recorded over Saint Andrews, South Carolina.

 

Chris Jackson, meteorologist and storm chaser, said: โ€œIt felt like someone shoved me right in my chest an instant before the boom began.โ€

 

The Pentagon's Noise Working Group has stated in the past that it is common over Special Use Airspace (SUA); however, that part of South Carolina is not an SUA.

Anonymous ID: cde792 May 30, 2026, 4:37 p.m. No.24661772   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>24661769

 

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MyRadar Weather

@MyRadarWX

BREAKING: We can confirm that it was an EXPLODING METEOR that produced a sonic boom over eastern Massachusetts and much of Southern New England at 2:07 p.m. Eastern time.

 

It was cloudy, so there weren't reliable reports. The American Meteor Society has logged several reports of the boom.

 

United States Geological Survey data confirms it was NOT an earthquake.

 

The GOES East weather satellite has a geostationary lightning mapper that can detect infrared light emissions. At 2:07 p.m., it plotted a line of simultaneous lightning strikes in a 50 mile-long line. That would be highly unusual for lightning. While there was lightning south of Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket, this was NOT the correct region of the overall storm for lightning, nonetheless a 50 mile-long stretch of it, to occur.

 

As such, we are comfortable calling this an EXPLODING METEOR. The satellites detected the infrared light emissions.

 

A few fragments likely fell to earth, but we're reviewing additional eyewitness data and radar data to determine the exact trajectory. (If it was moving southbound as it exploded, then a spattering of fragments probably fell on the Cape.)

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3:46 PM ยท May 30, 2026

ยท

https://x.com/MyRadarWX/status/2060810129126076488?s=20