The air left your tire some way, via holes in the rubber, leaking Schrader valve or you popped the bead partly off the rim. Or, the tire was already low. If your tire was already very low and you hit some killer frost heaves it would make it easier for the tire to slip on the bead. You need to find out what went wrong before doing any riding, IMO.
Soap and water on the rubber, paying close attention where it meets the bead. Soap and water on the Schrader valve. Bubbles on the Schrader, use a stem tool & tighten. Bubbles in the tread area, patch if possible. Bubbles in the sidewall, trash. Bubbles along the bead :fie: .... this be The Dread mon. You may have ruptured the sidewall, may have bent the rim (check it for sure) or may have just caused the tire to slip on the bead. I can’t imagine a hit hard enough to dislodge the bead that wouldn’t have damaged the tire and/or the rim.
For all you warm climes types, in the early spring when deeply frozen ground meets the warming effect of the sun the road bed and surface buckles in a wicked bad way. I’ve had to give up my drive to work coffee because the roads are too bad to sip. Heck, most of it just hits the head liner and my lap because I can’t get the mug to hit my lips. A few weeks ago I hit a frost heave that blasted my car so hard that it snapped one of the straps that holds my gas tank in place