Price's law
Price's law or Price's square root law is a bibliometric hypothesis proposed by Derek J. de Solla Price suggesting that in any scientific field, half of the published research comes from the square root of the total number of authors in that field.
The law specifically states that if n represents the total number of authors in a scientific domain, then √n authors will be responsible for producing approximately 50% of the total publications in that field. For example, if 100 papers are written by 25 authors, then out of the 25 authors will have contributed 50 papers.
Derek J. de Solla Price introduced this concept in his 1963 book "Little Science, Big Science" as part of his broader research on scientific productivity and information dynamics. The law was intended to describe the uneven distribution of scientific output across researchers.