SpaceX’s Starship program is advancing toward in-orbit refueling demonstrations that require two vehicles to rendezvous and dock, a capability built into the V3 configuration with added docking drogues, probes, and DragonEye sensors. Flight 12 in May 2026 marked the first V3 test and showed reliable propulsion and stage separation, but no docking attempt occurred. Traders are watching the pace of subsequent flights—Flight 13 is imminent—along with the technical hurdles of autonomous proximity operations, propellant transfer hardware validation, and FAA licensing. Recent company updates emphasize ship-to-ship refueling as essential for Artemis lunar missions and Mars ambitions, yet acknowledge the complexity remains undemonstrated. Competitive pressure from NASA timelines and internal iteration speed are the main variables likely to shift market-implied odds.
Resumen experimental generado por IA con datos de Polymarket. Esto no es asesoramiento de trading y no influye en cómo se resuelve este mercado. · Actualizado$34,030 Vol.
December 31, 2026
21%
December 31, 2027
55%
$34,030 Vol.
December 31, 2026
21%
December 31, 2027
55%
A qualifying docking maneuver must physically join two vessels, matching in velocity, into a connected structure via mating hardware for at least 60 continuous seconds. The two vessels must be in stable Earth orbit with a perigee of at least 100 kilometers above the Earth’s surface.
The docking of any two SpaceX vessels which each serve as an integrated rocket-and-spacecraft and both equal or exceed Starship in scale will qualify regardless of their contents or variant (standard, tanker, depot, HLS, test article, etc.). The two vessels must be free-flying. Any capsule or payload carried to orbit exclusively atop a separate launch vehicle will not qualify. If either vessel is passively placed into the mating interface of the other vessel, that conjunction will not qualify.
The resolution source for this market will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Mercado abierto: Jun 11, 2026, 1:09 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...A qualifying docking maneuver must physically join two vessels, matching in velocity, into a connected structure via mating hardware for at least 60 continuous seconds. The two vessels must be in stable Earth orbit with a perigee of at least 100 kilometers above the Earth’s surface.
The docking of any two SpaceX vessels which each serve as an integrated rocket-and-spacecraft and both equal or exceed Starship in scale will qualify regardless of their contents or variant (standard, tanker, depot, HLS, test article, etc.). The two vessels must be free-flying. Any capsule or payload carried to orbit exclusively atop a separate launch vehicle will not qualify. If either vessel is passively placed into the mating interface of the other vessel, that conjunction will not qualify.
The resolution source for this market will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...SpaceX’s Starship program is advancing toward in-orbit refueling demonstrations that require two vehicles to rendezvous and dock, a capability built into the V3 configuration with added docking drogues, probes, and DragonEye sensors. Flight 12 in May 2026 marked the first V3 test and showed reliable propulsion and stage separation, but no docking attempt occurred. Traders are watching the pace of subsequent flights—Flight 13 is imminent—along with the technical hurdles of autonomous proximity operations, propellant transfer hardware validation, and FAA licensing. Recent company updates emphasize ship-to-ship refueling as essential for Artemis lunar missions and Mars ambitions, yet acknowledge the complexity remains undemonstrated. Competitive pressure from NASA timelines and internal iteration speed are the main variables likely to shift market-implied odds.
Resumen experimental generado por IA con datos de Polymarket. Esto no es asesoramiento de trading y no influye en cómo se resuelve este mercado. · Actualizado
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