The problem is - lots of things create infrasound. This is the loudest thing within that hour, and approximately the right time, but is it a sonic boom?
Sonic booms should have an N-shaped profile, as shown in this figure from their wikipedia article: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:N-wave.png#/media/File:N-wave.png
That figure shows the whole thing lasting ~.2s.
If we zoom in on my own data, you have to stretch a little bit to believe that it has the same N-shape, but it's not entirely wrong.
The initial peak is ~.1s, but the whole thing takes ~.6s (from 21:42:26.4 to 21:42:27)
It was certainly one of the loudest things today, and a broad-spectrum 'boom'.
(Ignore the really huge thing in the recent lower left, that was me rebooting the RaspberryBoom because I thought it was offline 😬)
The big thing in the quiet nighttime hours is a helicopter - those have a very distinct signature.
Oh! This is fun. RaspberryShake now lets you download 'audio' of these events (sped up many times, and therefore frequency shifted higher).
Here's what this event sounded like.
@vxo there's a good chance there's one very near you, and you can just take the data from that :)
https://stationview.raspberryshake.org/#/?lat=38.57607&lon=238.47038&zoom=9.516
Oooh - there's only one in Sacramento, and it's pretty noisy.