The meteor that exploded over the Siberian city of Chelyabinsk in February released more than 30 times the explosive energy of the Hiroshima bomb, a study has found.
Scientists calculated that the blast caused by the disintegration of the space rock as it ploughed through the atmosphere at 19km a second was equivalent to between 500,000 and 600,000 tonnes of TNT - compared with the 16,000-tonne explosion at Hiroshima in 1945.
People directly under the meteor's flight were knocked over and many others suffered sunburn or eye damage as they looked at the intense fireball.
It was the biggest meteor blast since the devastating explosion over Tunguska, also in Siberia, in 1908, which flattened forests for hundreds of kilometres around and was reckoned to have released energy equivalent to between five million and 15 million tonnes of TNT.
The Chelyabinsk meteorite - the part of the meteor that fell to Earth - belongs to the most common class of space rock, known as ordinary chondrites. It is these that are most likely to cause a meteorite catastrophe, says Professor Qing-Zhu Yin of the University of California, Davis.