Do Kwon: "95% are going to die [coins], but there's also entertainment in watching companies die too"
8 days ago. Ironic. pic.twitter.com/fEQMZIyd9a
More than $40 billion in investor assets were lost in the crash between May 5 and May 13, 2022. Less than a year later, Do Kwon was arrested after allegedly attempting to flee prosecution for criminal activity associated with the losses.
Volumes have since been written discussing the breakdown, which saw the Luna coin plummet and Terra’s UST stablecoin de-pegged from the U.S. dollar.
Now, for what appears to be the first time, scientists have applied statistical mechanics to essentially reverse-engineer the crash using the same techniques used to study particle physics.
The research, conducted at King’s College London, concentrated on transaction events and orders occurring during the crash. Per the team’s preprint research paper:
These same techniques are used to map thermodynamics interactions, molecular dynamics, and atomic-level interactions. By applying them to individual events occurring during a specific period of time in a contained ecosystem, such as the Luna market, the researchers were able to glean deeper insight into the coin’s microstructure and the underlying causes for the collapse.
The process involved moving away from the snapshot methodology involved in the current state-of-the-art approach, Z-score-based anomaly detection, and into a granular view of events as they occurred.
By viewing events as particles, the team was able to incorporate layer 3 data into their analysis (which, above layer one and two data, includes data pertaining to order submissions, cancellations, and matches).
According to the researchers, this led them to uncover “widespread
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