Loud boom near Boston may have been an exploding meteor

The incident occurred in southern New England on Saturday afternoon

A loud boom rattled homes and nerves across southern New England on Saturday afternoon.

Social media lit up with reports of a loud, jarring noise across eastern Massachusetts and parts of Rhode Island and New Hampshire just after 2:00 p.m. on Saturday.

DON’T MISS: With so many bright fireball meteors lately, what's going on?

Massachusetts Bolide May 30 2026 Baron

No thunderstorms or ground-based explosions were reported at the time. The most likely cause is a bolide or fireball, which is a meteor that explodes as it crashes into Earth’s thick atmosphere.

Lightning sensors aboard NOAA'S GOES-East satellite detected an unusually large flash over eastern Massachusetts around the time residents began reporting the boom; the two pieces of evidence combined are consistent with a meteor exploding in Earth's upper atmosphere.

Bolides are a relatively common sight around the world as they produce a large flash of light and a visible streak left behind as the meteor disintegrates.

Large booms sometimes accompany bolides. The pressure wave from a large meteor that exploded over Chelyabinsk, Russia, caused significant damage throughout the city in February 2013.

WATCH: Dogs startled by sonic boom created by meteor over Great Lakes