Several people observed a meteorite illuminating the skies in Texas a few days ago on February 15 as it transformed into a fireball. While these space rocks usually have close encounters with Earth, they rarely come close enough to crash. The likelihood of meteors hitting the Earth's surface is low. However, this doesn't imply that these celestial rocks have never collided with Earth. An asteroid crashed on Earth around 10 days ago and, if you include this new meteorite crash, it makes for two surface impacts in the span of 20 days.
NASA revealed that a meteorite turned into an atmospheric fireball and crashed near McAllen, Texas, on February 15 around 6:00 PM EST. It was a 1000-pound rock and it broke into pieces about 21 miles above Earth's surface. According to NASA, the meteor's speed was about 27,000 miles per hour and it had an energy of about 8 tons of TNT.
Studying the radar and other data revealed that some fragments crashed on the surface.
According to several reports, law enforcement agencies in the McAllen region received several calls from residents who reported hearing a loud explosion. According to the local newspaper Laredo Morning Times, two airports also witnessed the meteorite's passing. The meteor fragments were recovered by the American Meteor Society and released in its photo. The organization also revealed that it was the third meteorite fragment recovered in the span of 3 days.
After the meteorite crash, NASA said in a statement, “The meteor seen in the skies above McAllen is a reminder of the need for NASA and other organizations to increase our understanding and protection of Earth, to combine scientific and engineering expertise to advance human space exploration, to integrate terrestrial and
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