I think it has to be the sonic boom.
While there are parallels between large bolides and nuclear weapons, especially in the total amount of energy released, there are some important differences.
A nuclear weapon releases all its energy in an instant (< 1 μs) and in a very small volume (~1 m3). It can do this in the air, on the surface or under ground or water. An asteroid's energy is entirely in its motion, and unless there's something to slow it down it cannot release that energy. In particular it cannot simply "detonate" in midair as a nuclear bomb can.
What it can do is to release that energy continuously as it decelerates in the air. If it breaks apart, its total surface area and energy release rate will suddenly increase, but it still won't "detonate". Unless perhaps it suddenly breaks apart into so many tiny pieces that decelerate so rapidly due to drag that all their remaining kinetic energies are released quickly enough to be considered an "explosion". But for a shallow trajectory like the Chelyabinks bolide, this didn't seem to happen. It seemed to release its energy more or less continuously over several seconds and quite a few km.
If there's still a lot of kinetic energy left when the object(s) hits the ground, then it/they will "detonate" and release all that energy in a very small volume and period of time. The effect will be much like the surface detonation of a nuclear weapon, with an incendiary thermal pulse, a blast wave and a crater, though no radiation of course.