In 189 days or 27,000 blocks, Bitcoin’s block reward is anticipated to halve. Within this period, around 13 adjustments in Bitcoin’s difficulty are expected. The network’s difficulty indicates the complexity of finding a hash below a particular target, essentially representing the computational power needed to mine a block. This self-regulation, embedded in Bitcoin’s code, ensures steady block times, predictable issuance, and network security.
As Bitcoin Halving Approaches, Miners Face More Than a Dozen Difficulty Retargets After Weathering 400+
Bitcoin’s difficulty saw a 6.47% increase this week, surpassing the 61 trillion mark at block height 812,448. This marked the cryptocurrency’s 403rd difficulty epoch, some of which included retargets with no change. In basic terms, Bitcoin’s difficulty measures the challenge of identifying a new block relative to its easiest potential level.
This measure, denoted by a specific number, is adjusted by the Bitcoin protocol every 2,016 blocks — approximately every two weeks — based on the time taken by miners to discover those 2,016 blocks. The difficulty adjustment ensures a consistent discovery of new blocks by miners, regardless of the number of miners in the network.
Notably, during its initial phase at block height 2,016, the difficulty didn’t alter due to a lack of mining activity. The justification for an increase or decrease hinges on the time required to process 2,016 blocks. Ideally, blocks should surface every ten minutes, totaling approximately two weeks for 2,016 blocks.
If these blocks are discovered quicker than this ten-minute benchmark and the block discovery rate accelerates, the difficulty escalates. Conversely, if it lags, the difficulty diminishes. After 19 different epochs of 2,016 blocks, at block height 40,320, Bitcoin’s difficulty rose for the first time by 100% on February 14, 2010.
The February 2010 adjustment marked Bitcoin’s second most significant change, surpassed only by a staggering 302.22% leap at block height 68,544 on July 16, 2010. Just three days before this monumental shift, the difficulty had surged at block height 66,528, recording the third-largest jump with an ascent of 95.65%.
Fast forward to May 26, 2011, and the fourth most pronounced hike transpired, with a 78.15% uptick at block height 127,008. Not far behind, the fifth most substantial surge in difficulty occurred on June 24, 2011, at block height 133,056, showcasing a 57.27% increment. Some significant upward shifts were witnessed at block 52,416, block 86,688, and block 124,992.
On the flip side, July 3, 2021 bore witness to the steepest negative shift in Bitcoin’s history at block height 689,472, plummeting by 27.94%. Following closely, October 30, 2011, saw the second sharpest dip at block height 151,200, registering an 18.03% decline. The difficulty nosedived by 16.05% at block height 655,200, decreased by 15.97% at block 685,440, and took a 15.95% tumble at block height 622,944. Rounding out the top eight downward adjustments are block 552,384, block 149,184, and block 681,408.
Bitcoin’s difficulty will persistently adapt, responding to the ebb and flow of miners within its network. To date, miners have amped up their hashrate, pushing it by an impressive 0.68 exahash per second (EH/s) daily. Remarkably, despite 15 difficulty increases in 2023, the hashrate still surged, tacking on an extra 194 EH/s in under a year.
What do you think about miners dealing with more than 400 difficulty adjustments over the years? Share your thoughts and opinions about this subject in the comments section below.
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