Current monitoring by NASA's Center for Near-Earth Object Studies shows no near-Earth objects on collision courses capable of producing a 5-kiloton TNT-equivalent bolide in 2026, with all tracked candidates carrying impact probabilities below 0.004 percent. A notable Q1 surge in fireball reports doubled large-witness events compared to recent averages, yet the strongest confirmed release reached only 0.25 kilotons over Ohio, leaving the year-to-date total well below historical baselines for events of 5 kilotons or greater. Infrasound and satellite networks continue to detect only smaller atmospheric entries, consistent with the roughly 0.2–0.5 annual global rate for qualifying impacts derived from long-term catalogs. This absence of escalation through mid-May sustains the market-implied 63.5 percent probability against a qualifying strike by year-end, though late-year detections of previously unseen small asteroids remain possible.
Eksperymentalne podsumowanie AI odwołujące się do danych Polymarket. To nie jest porada handlowa i nie ma wpływu na rozstrzyganie tego rynku. · Zaktualizowano5kt meteor strike in 2026?
$300,653 Wol.
$300,653 Wol.
$300,653 Wol.
$300,653 Wol.
The object must be classified as a natural meteoroid; events involving artificial objects or reentry vehicles do not qualify.
The primary resolution source will be the NASA JPL Fireball and Bolide Data repository: https://cneos.jpl.nasa.gov/fireballs/. The relevant field for determining impact energy is the “Impact Energy (kt)” column. If this dataset has not been updated to include all relevant dates by February 28, 2027, or if the NASA JPL Fireball and Bolide Data repository becomes permanently unavailable, this market may resolve based on a consensus of credible sources including the European Space Agency (ESA), the International Asteroid Warning Network (IAWN), the U.S. Department of Defense, or credible reporting of a scientific consensus, such as a NASA press release.
Rynek otwarty: Dec 31, 2025, 12:04 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...The object must be classified as a natural meteoroid; events involving artificial objects or reentry vehicles do not qualify.
The primary resolution source will be the NASA JPL Fireball and Bolide Data repository: https://cneos.jpl.nasa.gov/fireballs/. The relevant field for determining impact energy is the “Impact Energy (kt)” column. If this dataset has not been updated to include all relevant dates by February 28, 2027, or if the NASA JPL Fireball and Bolide Data repository becomes permanently unavailable, this market may resolve based on a consensus of credible sources including the European Space Agency (ESA), the International Asteroid Warning Network (IAWN), the U.S. Department of Defense, or credible reporting of a scientific consensus, such as a NASA press release.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Current monitoring by NASA's Center for Near-Earth Object Studies shows no near-Earth objects on collision courses capable of producing a 5-kiloton TNT-equivalent bolide in 2026, with all tracked candidates carrying impact probabilities below 0.004 percent. A notable Q1 surge in fireball reports doubled large-witness events compared to recent averages, yet the strongest confirmed release reached only 0.25 kilotons over Ohio, leaving the year-to-date total well below historical baselines for events of 5 kilotons or greater. Infrasound and satellite networks continue to detect only smaller atmospheric entries, consistent with the roughly 0.2–0.5 annual global rate for qualifying impacts derived from long-term catalogs. This absence of escalation through mid-May sustains the market-implied 63.5 percent probability against a qualifying strike by year-end, though late-year detections of previously unseen small asteroids remain possible.
Eksperymentalne podsumowanie AI odwołujące się do danych Polymarket. To nie jest porada handlowa i nie ma wpływu na rozstrzyganie tego rynku. · Zaktualizowano
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