Moore's law, Wright's law and the Countdown to Exponential Space
Daniel Berleant, Venkat Kodali, Richard Segall, Hyacinthe Aboudja and, Michael Howell

TL;DR
This paper examines whether space technology development follows Moore's law or Wright's law, finding broad consistency with these exponential growth models and suggesting future exponential progress in commercial space sectors.
Contribution
The paper analyzes the applicability of Moore's law and Wright's law to space technology development and discusses implications for future exponential growth in commercial space exploration.
Findings
Space technologies broadly follow Moore's and Wright's laws.
Both laws converge in predicting technological progress with exponential manufacturing volume.
Commercial space sector may experience unambiguous exponential growth in technology.
Abstract
Technologies have often been observed to improve exponentially over time. In practice this often means identifying a constant known as the doubling time, describing the time period over which the technology roughly doubles in some measure of performance or of performance per dollar. Moore's law is, classically, the empirical observation that the number of electronic components that can be put on a chip doubles every 18 months to 2 years. Today it is frequently stated as the number of computations available per unit of cost. Generalized to the appropriate doubling time, it describes the rate of advancement in many technologies. A frequently noted competitor to Moore's law is known as Wright's law, which has aeronautical roots. Wright's law (also called power law, experience curve and Henderson's law) relates some quality of a manufactured unit (for Wright, airplanes) to the volume of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTechnology Assessment and Management · Spacecraft Design and Technology · Innovation Diffusion and Forecasting
