More than 3000 witnesses in Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands have reported observing a bright fireball meteor at about 6.55 pm local time (about 5.55 pm GMT) on Sunday 8 March 2026, with some witnesses also reporting a sonic boom. The meteor is described as having moved from southwest to northeast for about six seconds before exploding in a fireball over the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate. A fireball is defined as a meteor (shooting star) brighter than the planet Venus.
Objects of this size probably enter the Earth's atmosphere several times a year, though unless they do so over populated areas they are unlikely to be noticed. They are officially described as fireballs if they produce a light brighter than the planet Venus. The brightness of a meteor is caused by friction with the Earth's atmosphere, which is typically far greater than that caused by simple falling, due to the initial trajectory of the object. Such objects typically eventually explode in an airburst called by the friction, causing them to vanish as a luminous object. However, this is not the end of the story as such explosions result in the production of a number of smaller objects, which fall to the ground under the influence of gravity (which does not cause the luminescence associated with friction-induced heating).
These 'dark objects' do not continue along the path of the original bolide, but neither do they fall directly to the ground, but rather follow a course determined by the atmospheric currents (winds) through which the objects pass. Scientists are able to calculate potential trajectories for hypothetical dark objects derived from meteors using data from weather monitoring services.
Shortly after the meteor was sighted, two residents of a flat in the German city of Koblenz reported an impact which had caused a football-sized hole in their roof, as well as damage to a tiled floor in the room underneath. A search of the flat yielded eleven fragments of rock with masses of between 6 and 161 g. A number of smaller fragments were subsequently found in a neighbouring courtyard by professional meteorite-hunters and sold. Police in Koblenz have subsequently issued a warning to other meteorite-hunters in the area to respect private property, and not to collect suspected fragments from areas which they have not been given permission to enter.
The meteorite fragments have a pale interior and a near-black crust, making it likely that they are a type of stoney meteorite called a HED (howardite–eucrite–diogenite) achondrite breccia. These meteorites resemble terrestrial igneous rocks, and are therefore presumed to have come from a body large enough for magma differentiation and igneous processing to have occurred. HED meteorites comprise about 5% of all meteorites recovered on Earth, and about 60% of achondritic meteorites (meteorites which do not contain chondrules, spherules of glassy material thought to have formed from molten droplets in space before being incorporated into larger bodies).
While HED meteorites vary somewhat in composition, all are thought to derive from the surface of the Asteroid 4 Vesta. Studies of these meteorites have produced crystallisation ages of between 4.43 and 4.55 billion years, and all show signs of having formed in an environment where igneous differentiation has occurred. These meteorites are thought to have been dislodged from the surface of their parent body by ancient impacts.
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