The low historical frequency of 100-kiloton-scale impacts—roughly one every several thousand years based on near-Earth object surveys—underpins the 91.8% market-implied probability of no such event in 2026. NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordination Office and global asteroid monitoring programs have catalogued the vast majority of objects large enough to produce this energy release, with no detected threats on collision courses this year. Ongoing sky surveys continue to refine orbital data and reduce uncertainty for remaining undiscovered bodies, though smaller undetected meteoroids could still deliver localized effects. Any shift would require a confirmed new detection with a trajectory intersecting Earth within the remaining months, an outcome current observational coverage makes statistically unlikely.
Resumo experimental gerado por IA com dados do Polymarket. Isto não é aconselhamento de trading e não tem qualquer papel na resolução deste mercado. · AtualizadoQueda de meteoro de 100kt em 2026?
Sim
Sim
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.
Mercado Aberto: Jan 2, 2026, 2:23 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...The low historical frequency of 100-kiloton-scale impacts—roughly one every several thousand years based on near-Earth object surveys—underpins the 91.8% market-implied probability of no such event in 2026. NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordination Office and global asteroid monitoring programs have catalogued the vast majority of objects large enough to produce this energy release, with no detected threats on collision courses this year. Ongoing sky surveys continue to refine orbital data and reduce uncertainty for remaining undiscovered bodies, though smaller undetected meteoroids could still deliver localized effects. Any shift would require a confirmed new detection with a trajectory intersecting Earth within the remaining months, an outcome current observational coverage makes statistically unlikely.
Resumo experimental gerado por IA com dados do Polymarket. Isto não é aconselhamento de trading e não tem qualquer papel na resolução deste mercado. · Atualizado
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