BeeTheory · Galactic Application · Technical Note XXXII

A Case Where the Method Fails:
F568-1 with Milky Way Parameters

Applying the exact methodology of Note XXXI — geometric decomposition into sub-elements, visible mass and wave mass calculated ring by ring, universal parameters $(\lambda, c) = (2.00, 1.85)$ — to F568-1, a low surface brightness Sd galaxy. The result: $V_\text{max}^\text{predicted} = 37$ km/s versus $V_f^\text{observed} = 115$ km/s, an underestimation of $-68\%$. We document this failure in detail because it reveals the structural limits of universal parameters and points toward what BeeTheory must include to handle LSB galaxies.

1. The result first

F568-1 with universal parameters — failure documented

Galaxy typeLSB (low surface brightness), Hubble Sd, T=8
Disk scale length $R_d$$3.2$ kpc
Central surface density $\Sigma_d$$40\,L_\odot/\text{pc}^2$ (very low)
Total visible mass $M_\text{bar}$$3.68 \times 10^9\,M_\odot$ (18× less than MW)
Observed $V_f$ (SPARC)$115$ km/s
BeeTheory $V_\text{max}$ predicted$37$ km/s (universal MW parameters $\lambda=2.00$, $c=1.85$)
Error$-68\%$ — major underestimation

The methodology of Note XXXI applied identically to F568-1 produces a rotation velocity less than one third of the observed value. The universal Milky Way parameters do not extrapolate to this LSB galaxy. The reason is structural and informative.

2. Step 1 — Geometric decomposition into sub-elements

Per Note XXX, every visible mass element carries its own wave function. To compute the galactic wave field, we decompose F568-1 into discrete rings — 10 for the stellar disk, 10 for the gas disk — each treated as an independent source.

Stellar disk — exponential profile $\Sigma_\star(R) = \Sigma_{d,0}\,e^{-R/R_d}$ with $R_d = 3.2$ kpc, integrated with $\Upsilon = 0.5\,M_\odot/L_\odot$ at $3.6\,\mu$m:

$$M_\star \;=\; \Upsilon \cdot 2\pi\,\Sigma_{d,0}\,R_d^2 \;=\; 1.29 \times 10^9\,M_\odot$$

Ring $i$$R_i$ (kpc)$\Sigma_\star(R_i)$ ($L_\odot/\text{pc}^2$)$dM_{\star,i}$ ($M_\odot$)
00.9629.6$1.72 \times 10^8$
12.8816.3$2.83 \times 10^8$
24.808.9$2.58 \times 10^8$
36.724.9$1.99 \times 10^8$
48.642.7$1.40 \times 10^8$
510.561.5$9.4 \times 10^7$
612.480.8$6.1 \times 10^7$
714.400.4$3.9 \times 10^7$
816.320.2$2.4 \times 10^7$
918.240.1$1.5 \times 10^7$
Sum$1.28 \times 10^9$ (99.7% of $M_\star$)
Stellar disk decomposed into 10 exponential rings between $R = 0$ and $R = 6\,R_d = 19.2$ kpc. Each ring’s mass is $dM_{\star,i} = \Upsilon\,\Sigma_\star(R_i)\,2\pi R_i\,dR$.

Gas disk — extended exponential with $R_{d,\text{gas}} = 2.5\,R_d = 8.0$ kpc (gas reaches further than stars), total mass $M_\text{gas} = 1.33 \cdot M_{\text{HI}} = 2.39 \times 10^9\,M_\odot$ (He correction included). Decomposition into 10 rings up to $R = 48$ kpc.

F568-1 — geometric decomposition: visible mass + wave mass per ring Each ring carries dM_visible (gold/green) and engenders dM_wave = λ·dM_visible (red overlay) 0102030405000.300.600.901.20 R (kpc) — galactocentric distance dM per ring (10⁹ M_⊙) stellar dM (visible)gas dM (visible)wave mass added (×λ on top of visible)
F568-1 decomposed into 20 rings (10 stellar in gold, 10 gas in green). Each visible ring generates a wave-mass contribution shown in red (with $\lambda = 2$, so wave mass equals twice the visible mass). The wave mass is spatially extended with $\ell_\text{wave}^\star = 5.9$ kpc for the stellar disk and $\ell_\text{wave}^\text{gas} = 14.8$ kpc for the gas — broader than the visible distribution itself.

3. Step 2 — Wave mass generated by each sub-element

For each ring $i$ of mass $dM_i$, the BeeTheory wave field carries an additional mass $dM_{\text{wave},i} = \lambda \cdot dM_i$ with $\lambda = 2.00$. The spatial extent of each ring’s wave function is $ell_text{wave} = c cdot R_d$ where $c = 1.85$ is taken from the Milky Way calibration.

Component$R_d$$\ell_\text{wave} = c\,R_d$$M_\text{visible}$$M_\text{wave} = \lambda\,M_\text{visible}$
Stellar disk3.2 kpc5.9 kpc$1.29 \times 10^9\,M_\odot$$2.57 \times 10^9\,M_\odot$
Gas disk8.0 kpc14.8 kpc$2.39 \times 10^9\,M_\odot$$4.78 \times 10^9\,M_\odot$
Total$3.68 \times 10^9\,M_\odot$$7.34 \times 10^9\,M_\odot$
Visible and wave masses for F568-1. The total dynamical mass (visible + wave) reaches $11 times 10^9,M_odot$, but as we will see, this is still insufficient to produce the observed rotation velocity.

4. Step 3 — Rotation curve from sub-element summation

The total circular velocity at each radius $R$ combines the baryonic Freeman contribution (visible stars + gas) and the wave-field contribution (collective wave mass):

$$V^2(R) \;=\; V_\text{baryon}^2(R) + V_\text{wave}^2(R) \quad\text{with}\quad V_\text{wave}^2(R) = \frac{G\,\lambda\,M_\text{wave,enc}(R)}{R}$$

F568-1 — A low surface brightness galaxy where the Milky Way parameters fail Sd-type, R_d = 3.2 kpc, Σ_d = 40 L_⊙/pc² — applied the same logic as Note XXXI 0510152025300255075100125 V_f observed = 115 km/s V_max = 37.4 λ = 2.00 (universal)c = 1.85 (universal)Error = -68% R (kpc) V_circ (km/s) V_baryon (visible mass only)V_wave (BeeTheory)V_total predictedV_f observed
F568-1 rotation curve. The baryonic curve (gold) tops out near $32$ km/s. The wave-field contribution (red) reaches $\sim 23$ km/s. The total (green) plateaus at $V_\text{max} = 37$ km/s — well below the observed plateau (blue, $V_f = 115$ km/s). The methodology that worked for the Milky Way fails here by a factor of 3.
$R$ (kpc)$V_\text{baryon}$ (km/s)$V_\text{wave}$ (km/s)$V_\text{total}$ (km/s)
2.019.45.620.2
4.027.210.029.0
6.030.613.533.4
8.031.916.135.7
10.032.118.236.8
12.031.719.737.3
15.030.621.437.3
20.028.522.936.5
25.026.423.435.3
30.024.523.533.9
Velocity decomposition along the rotation curve. The plateau is reached around $R = 12$–$15$ kpc with $V_\text{max} \approx 37$ km/s — far below the observed $V_f = 115$ km/s.

5. Why does it fail? — A structural problem, not a calibration one

The failure on F568-1 is not a small numerical error to be tuned away. It is a $-68\%$ underestimation that exposes a fundamental property of the formulation.

In the universal-parameter framework, the relation between the observed plateau velocity and the visible mass takes a definite form. For a system in the asymptotic regime, the total dynamical mass enclosed is $M_\text{dyn} = M_\text{visible}(1+\lambda)$, and:

$$V_f^2 \;\approx\; \frac{G\,(1+\lambda)\,M_\text{visible}}{R_\text{plateau}} \quad\Rightarrow\quad V_f \;\propto\; \sqrt{M_\text{visible}}$$

The universal-parameter prediction is therefore $V_f \propto M_\text{vis}^{1/2}$. But observations across hundreds of galaxies (the baryonic Tully-Fisher relation) give:

$$V_f^4 \;\propto\; M_\text{visible} \quad\Rightarrow\quad V_f \;\propto\; M_\text{visible}^{1/4}$$

This is a different power law. A model with universal $\lambda$ and $c$ cannot simultaneously match galaxies that span four decades in visible mass. The Milky Way ($M_text{vis} sim 7 times 10^{10}$) and F568-1 ($M_text{vis} sim 4 times 10^9$) differ by a factor 18 in mass — under $V_f propto sqrt{M}$, this gives a factor $sqrt{18} approx 4.2$ in velocity, while the observed ratio is only $V_f^text{MW}/V_f^text{F568-1} = 229/115 approx 2$.

The diagnostic

The Milky Way parameters $(lambda, c) = (2.00, 1.85)$ embed information specific to a massive Sbc galaxy with substantial bulge and high central surface density. For an LSB galaxy with the same baryonic mechanism but much lower surface density, the wave-mass response must be stronger — either $\lambda$ must scale, or $c$ must scale, or both. In its current form, BeeTheory with universal parameters cannot span the full SPARC sample.

6. What does this tell us about BeeTheory?

The F568-1 case is not a refutation of BeeTheory — it is a constraint on its physical content. Three observations follow naturally:

  • The wave coupling cannot be a single number. Either $\lambda$ depends on local surface density $\Sigma_d$, or $\ell_\text{wave}$ depends on it, or both. LSB galaxies, with diffuse visible matter, must generate a relatively stronger wave field per unit visible mass than HSB galaxies.
  • This is consistent with a wave-field physical mechanism. A more diffuse source spreads its wave function over a larger volume; constructive interference between widely separated source elements is geometrically different from interference in a dense, compact disk. The coherence length is a property of the source’s geometry, not of the source itself.
  • The Radial Acceleration Relation (RAR) of McGaugh et al. (2016) already encodes this empirically: the relation $g_text{obs} = nu(g_text{bar}),g_text{bar}$ is universal across galaxy types, where $nu$ depends on the local baryonic acceleration. BeeTheory must reproduce this in detail, which requires the wave-field response to scale with local $\Sigma_d$ — not with global $\lambda$.

The failure on F568-1 is therefore informative: it tells us that BeeTheory’s two-parameter universal form is incomplete, and points toward a refinement where the wave coupling depends on local surface density.

7. Summary

1. F568-1 was selected as a representative LSB galaxy from the SPARC calibration sample.

2. The exact Note XXXI methodology was applied: 10 stellar rings + 10 gas rings, each ring carrying visible mass $dM_i$ and wave mass $\lambda\,dM_i$, with $\ell_\text{wave} = c\,R_d$ universal.

3. The total predicted rotation velocity peaks at $V_\text{max} = 37$ km/s, against $V_f^\text{obs} = 115$ km/s. Error: $-68\%$.

4. The failure follows from the implicit scaling $V_f \propto \sqrt{M_\text{vis}}$ of the universal model, which contradicts the empirical baryonic Tully-Fisher relation $V_f \propto M_\text{vis}^{1/4}$.

5. BeeTheory with universal $\lambda$ and $c$ cannot span the four-decade mass range of the SPARC sample. The wave coupling must depend on local surface density — a refinement that the next note will introduce and test on the full 23-galaxy set.

6. The failure is structural and informative: it identifies where the current formulation lacks physical content, and points to a specific path forward — surface-density-dependent coupling — that is both physically motivated and empirically constrained by the RAR.


References. Dutertre, X. — Bee Theory™: Wave-Based Modeling of Gravity, v2, BeeTheory.com (2023). · Notes XXX–XXXI — BeeTheory.com (2026). · Lelli, F., McGaugh, S. S., Schombert, J. M. — SPARC: 175 Disk Galaxies with Spitzer Photometry and Accurate Rotation Curves, AJ 152, 157 (2016). · McGaugh, S. S., Schombert, J. M., Bothun, G. D. — The cosmological constraints on low surface brightness galaxies, AJ 109, 2019 (1995). · McGaugh, S. S., Lelli, F., Schombert, J. M. — Radial Acceleration Relation in Rotationally Supported Galaxies, PRL 117, 201101 (2016). · Freeman, K. C. — On the disks of spiral and S0 galaxies, ApJ 160, 811 (1970).

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