The Bitcoin Power Law, the model physicist Giovanni Santostasi has championed for over a decade, is now peer-reviewed science. The new study argues Bitcoin’s (BTC) long-term price growth follows a predictable mathematical trend rooted in network adoption.
Elsevier’s journal Nonlinear Science published the study online on June 29. Analyst Benjamin Cowen quickly joined the congratulations.
From Reddit Post to Peer-Reviewed Science
Santostasi, a former physics professor who spent years researching gravitational waves, first sketched the idea in a 2014 Reddit post. He noticed Bitcoin’s price climbing along a strikingly straight line when plotted on logarithmic scales.
For years, the theory lived on social media and community charts, which Santostasi expanded into a 2024 Medium essay. Critics dismissed it as curve fitting, the same charge leveled at Bitcoin’s famous rainbow chart.
Academics had connected Bitcoin’s value to network size before. Timothy Peterson published a Metcalfe’s Law analysis in 2018, and a Royal Society study followed in 2019. However, both treated Bitcoin’s growth rate as a number fitted to data, not one the math itself predicts.
That gap is what Santostasi and co-author Stephen Perrenod claim to close. They defended the model before independent reviewers, and the journal accepted it.
“Achievement unlocked! Power Law paper published. Thank you for all your support and constuctive criticism along the way,” Santostasi wrote in a post on X.
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Cowen, a nuclear engineering PhD who founded analytics firm Into The Cryptoverse in 2019, publicly congratulated him days later.
What the Bitcoin Power Law Study Found
The paper analyzed 5,696 daily Bitcoin prices from July 2010 through February 2026. Across that stretch, one steady mathematical curve, known as a power law, explains about 96% of the price’s long-run variation.
The authors trace the pattern to two simple forces:
- New users join Bitcoin in accelerating waves.
The same growth shape documented in a 1989 study of the US AIDS epidemic.
- The network gains value as each newcomer connects with everyone already inside.
Multiplied together, those two effects predict almost exactly the growth rate Bitcoin has shown for 15 years. The prediction lands within 1.6% of the measured figure.
Speculation still matters, the authors argue. However, booms and busts wash in and out around the trend instead of driving it. The paper also lists conditions that would break the model, keeping the theory testable.
Can the Model Survive the Bear Market?
The timing adds intrigue. Bitcoin trades near $60,642, according to BeInCrypto Markets data. That is 43% lower over the past year and 52% below its October 2025 record of $126,080.
Other popular frameworks have struggled in this downturn. Stock-to-flow has broken down, while Standard Chartered and Galaxy Digital stake out floors of $59,000 and $40,000 in the Bitcoin bottom debate.
Cycle-based tools face similar questions. The 500-day halving rule still points to a buy window in November 2026, while Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong defends the 4-year cycle.
The paper offers a direct answer to the survival question. Every earlier bear market stayed within the model’s normal range of swings. Stability tests found no structural breaks between 2011 and 2026.
The authors also identify five conditions that would break the trend, each with measurable early signs:
- Floor violation (F1) — price falls more than 3 standard deviations below the trend line and stays there over a year. In 2025 terms, that floor was roughly $10,000.
- Adoption collapse (F2) — address growth slows sharply below its cubic rate in rolling estimates, e.g., if a rival network starts absorbing Bitcoin’s marginal adopters.
- Exponent drift (F3) — the growth exponent drifts outside the 5.0–7.0 band over a multi-year period.
- Metcalfe breakdown (F4) — price and address count decouple (Metcalfe fit R² sustained below 0.7), meaning the market stops pricing Bitcoin as a network good.
- R² collapse (F5) — the rolling 3-year fit of the price power law drops below 0.80 for two consecutive years.
However, the study’s data ends in February 2026, leaving the latest slide outside it. A peer-reviewed trend line does not guarantee future returns, and the authors avoid price targets.
That gap makes this bear market the Bitcoin Power Law’s first live test as published science.
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The post Bitcoin Power Law Goes Peer-Reviewed: Will the Model Survive the Bear Market? appeared first on BeInCrypto.

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