Several hours later, at 16:44 UTC, a report arrived from southern
Botswana to the
American Meteor Society that an exceptionally bright fireball had been spotted. Although this was further west than projected based on the initial observations, the timing and location were consistent, although substantiated by just one observer. Confirmation that the asteroid had impacted Earth, rather than simply a near approach, came when two observations by the
Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) arrived later the same day and extended the observation arc from 85 minutes to 3 hours and 47 minutes, significantly improving the orbital parameters. The 4 hour observation arc better constrained the
line of variations and showed that the asteroid was virtually certain to impact Earth, and based only on the sky observations, projected to have impacted in
Namibia instead. This proves consistent with the fireball report. The
bolide was also detected by
infrasound at station I47 in South Africa and registered about 0.4 kt. The asteroid was several meters in diameter and impacted the atmosphere going about . Based on its velocity and energy, the asteroid was likely 2.6-3.8 meters in diameter. Asteroids in the range of several meters in diameter are very hard to detect as they are too small to reflect much sunlight. For example, on 24 May 2018, the asteroid was still from Earth and only had an
apparent magnitude of 25.5, much dimmer than any major modern surveys can detect using rapid-fire 30 second snapshots meant to cover as much of the sky as possible. == Fragment recovery==