I understand that the SLS solid rocket boosters and core stage are designed to be expendable, and will crash into the ocean at terminal velocity. Presumably, when that happens, it results in a large fireball and the complete destruction of the boosters. Yet, I have noticed on Polymarket there is a market for whether the boosters on the Artemis II test flight will explode, which seems to be priced unexpectedly low. The definition of an explosion in the rules of the market is quite generous:
This market will resolve to "Yes" if the booster for the Artemis II mission explodes at any point during the test from the start of fueling operations to 60 minutes after it makes contact with Earth upon landing. Otherwise, this market will resolve to “No”.
An explosion is defined as a violent and catastrophic event resulting in the destruction of all or part of the vehicle, regardless of intent or context (e.g., a planned termination event would also count).
Normally, prediction markets are very good predictors of the news (often better than expert assessment), so I am curious if I am misunderstanding something here. Will the boosters on the Artemis flight not explode for some reason when they hit the water?

