Сөздік

Merkle Tree

16.04.2026

A Merkle tree is a hierarchical data structure where data is hashed in pairs repeatedly until a single hash remains — the Merkle root. Blockchains use Merkle trees to represent all transactions in a block in a compact, verifiable form.

How it works

  1. Each transaction in a block is hashed individually: Hash(Tx1), Hash(Tx2), etc.
  2. Adjacent hashes are paired and hashed together: Hash(Hash(Tx1) + Hash(Tx2))
  3. This process repeats, combining pairs level by level, until only one hash remains
  4. This final hash is the Merkle root, which is stored in the block header
        Merkle Root
           /    \
        H(1+2)  H(3+4)
        /  \    /  \
      H1   H2 H3   H4
      |    |   |    |
     Tx1  Tx2 Tx3  Tx4

Why it matters

Efficiency: To verify that a specific transaction is in a block, you only need a small set of hashes along the path to the root (a Merkle proof) — not the entire block. This is critical for lightweight clients (SPV wallets) that don't download full blocks.

Integrity: Any change to any transaction changes its hash, which changes the parent hash, and so on up to the Merkle root. This makes tampering immediately detectable.

See also

Бұл мақала басқа тілдерде қол жетімді: