A unit of measurement for the amount of computing power being consumed by the network to continuously operate.
Hash power, or hash rate, are interchangeable terms used to describe the combined computational power of a specific
cryptocurrency network or the power of an individual
mining rig on that network.
The operation of any
mineable cryptocurrency — for example, Bitcoin (
BTC) — is maintained by its own network of
miners: individuals and organizations that contribute the computational power of their mining rigs to process
transactions and emit new
coins. They do this via calculating
cryptographic hashes — pseudorandom data strings that are used to prevent
double spending and to ensure that new coins can’t be created out of thin air.
The hash rate of a mining rig is the number of hashes that it can calculate per second. The combined hash power of a cryptocurrency network is the sum of the hash rates of all mining rigs that are in operation at any given moment.
Different devices, such as
CPUs,
GPUs and
ASICs have differing hash rates, depending on their sheer computational power, as well as how well-optimized they are for the specific task of processing a given hash function.
The hash rate of an individual device is a key metric for measuring the profitability of a mining setup as it determines the likelihood of finding a “good” hash that will produce a
mining reward.
On the other hand, the overall hash rate of a cryptocurrency network is an indicator of that coin’s security: in order to hack the network for personal gain, the attackers need to overcome its total hash power — making the task nearly impossible at high enough hash rates.