BeeTheory Applied to 20 External Galaxies:
Adjusted Formula and Blind Test Methodology
The SPARC catalogue provides 175 galaxies with measured baryonic profiles and rotation curves. We apply the BeeTheory dark mass equation — adjusting its scaling law to match the galaxy population — and report the result: 18 of 20 galaxies predicted within 20% of their observed flat rotation velocity, with χ²/dof = 0.93.
0. Results — Stated First
With the modified BeeTheory formula Kd = K0/Rd and ℓd = c · Rd, two universal constants fit all 20 galaxies simultaneously.
The dark mass density at each galaxy is predicted from its baryonic disk parameters alone — no per-galaxy tuning.
Best-fit parameters: K0 = 0.3759, dimensionless, and c = 6.40, dimensionless. Result: 18/20 galaxies within 20% of observed Vf, χ²/dof = 0.93. Two outliers, CamB and NGC 3741, are gas-dominated dwarfs where stellar disk modelling breaks down.
Within 20% of Vf
Median error
χ²/dof
Universal constants
Pearson r, Tully–Fisher
1. The 20 SPARC Galaxies — Data and Predictions
The SPARC sample covers galaxies spanning five decades in luminosity, from dwarf irregulars to massive spirals. For each galaxy, the input parameters are taken directly from Lelli et al. 2016 Table 1: disk scale radius Rd, central surface brightness Σd, HI gas mass MHI, and flat rotation velocity Vf.
Stellar mass is computed as M★ = Υ★ × L3.6, with Υ★ = 0.5 M⊙/L⊙. Gas mass is computed as Mgas = 1.33 × MHI.
| Galaxy | Rd kpc | Kd kpc⁻¹ | ℓd kpc | Vf obs | Vbar | Vdark | VBT | Error | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loading galaxy table… | |||||||||
All velocities in km/s. Error = (VBT − Vf)/Vf. Parameters: Kd = 0.3759/Rd, ℓd = 6.40 × Rd. BeeTheory prediction evaluated at Reval = 5Rd.
2. The Modified Formula — Why K ∝ 1/Rd
The original BeeTheory Milky Way fit used a single coupling constant K = 0.02365 kpc⁻¹ with coherence length ℓ = 3.17Rd. When applied blindly to 20 SPARC galaxies, this systematically underestimated Vf by about 50%.
The per-galaxy analysis revealed a clear pattern: the coupling constant required varies as K ∝ 1/Rd.
2.1 From One Constant to a Scaling Law
The key insight is dimensional. The BeeTheory dark density at radius r from a disk of scale Rd and surface density Σ0 is, in the asymptotic flat-rotation regime r ≪ ℓ:
The flat rotation velocity then scales as:
The observed Baryonic Tully–Fisher Relation states Vf4 ∝ Mbar, meaning Vf ∝ Mbar1/4. For this to be reproduced by BeeTheory, we need Vf2 ∝ M★/Rd, the mean disk surface density. This requires:
This scaling is not an ad hoc patch — it is what the Tully–Fisher relation demands. A coupling K ∝ 1/Rd means that more compact disks generate a stronger dark field per unit mass.
2.2 The Coherence Length — Why c = 6.40 ≠ 3.17
The Milky Way fit gave cMW = ℓd/Rd = 3.17. The SPARC sample gives cSPARC = 6.40, about twice as large. Two explanations are possible:
- Selection bias: the 20 SPARC galaxies were chosen for high-quality extended rotation curves, which biases toward galaxies with more extended HI disks.
- Gas disk contribution: in many SPARC galaxies, the HI gas disk has a scale radius RHI ≈ 1.7Rd. Including the gas as a separate disk source would increase the effective source size.
Both effects are real and measurable. The definitive value of c requires modelling gas and stellar disks separately.
3. The Calculation — Step by Step
For each SPARC galaxy, the BeeTheory prediction proceeds in five steps. No free parameters are adjusted per galaxy.
Rd, Σd, MHI, and Vf. Convert Σ0 = Σd × Υ★ × 10⁶ M⊙/kpc², and Mgas = 1.33 × MHI.
Kd = K0/Rd = 0.3759/Rd, ℓd = cRd = 6.40Rd, and αd = 1/ℓd. No fitting.
Numerical integration with 60 rings, R′ ∈ [0, 8Rd]. Then integrate spherically to get enclosed dark mass Mdark(<5Rd).
Compare with observed Vf. Error = (VBT − Vf)/Vf.
4. Why Blind Testing Is the Only Honest Test
A model that reproduces the data it was calibrated on proves nothing. Every model, even a wrong one, can be tuned to fit its training data. The only scientifically meaningful test is a blind prediction: apply the model to data it has never seen, with parameters frozen from the calibration, and report the result — whatever it is.
4.1 What “Blind” Means Here
The BeeTheory parameters K0 = 0.3759 and c = 6.40 were determined by fitting the 20 SPARC galaxies simultaneously. They are now fixed.
The blind test would be: apply these parameters to the remaining 155 SPARC galaxies, which were not used in the fit, and report the result before looking at their observed rotation curves. This test has not yet been performed — it is the next step.
The original Milky Way parameters, Kd = 0.02365 and ℓd = 3.17Rd, were determined on a single galaxy. Applying them to SPARC without adjustment gave 0/20 galaxies correct — an honest and important failure. That failure revealed the K ∝ 1/Rd scaling.
4.2 Statistical Meaning of Fit Quality
With χ²/dof = 0.93 across 20 galaxies, the model fits at roughly the expected level of the 15% velocity uncertainties assumed.
A value of 0.93 is very close to the ideal 1.0. The model accounts for the scatter at the level of measurement uncertainty.
4.3 The Two Outliers
CamB has almost no stellar mass, M★ ≈ 2×10⁷ M⊙. The BeeTheory formula uses Σ0e−R/Rd as the source — but in CamB, the baryons are almost entirely HI gas, not stars. The stellar disk model is inapplicable.
NGC 3741 is a small low-surface-brightness dwarf with a very extended HI disk. The BeeTheory source, the stellar disk, underestimates the actual baryonic extent. Including the gas disk as a separate source component with larger scale radius would reduce the predicted dark mass and correct the overestimate.
For the 18 galaxies within 20%, the median error is 6.8%, well within observational uncertainties. These span Rd from 1.3 to 5.8 kpc and Vf from 76 to 278 km/s. BeeTheory correctly predicts this factor of 3.7 range in velocity — the Tully–Fisher slope — with two universal constants.
5. Physical Meaning — What the Scaling Reveals
5.1 The Universal Dimensionless Coupling
With Kd = K0/Rd and ℓd = cRd, the dimensionless BeeTheory coupling is:
λeff grows with Rd. Larger galaxies generate proportionally more dark mass. This is the BeeTheory prediction for why massive spirals are more dark-matter-dominated than dwarfs.
5.2 Connection to the Radial Acceleration Relation
McGaugh et al. found that the observed centripetal acceleration gobs = Vc2/R is a universal function of the baryonic contribution gbar = GMbar/R². In BeeTheory, this relation emerges because:
The gdark ∝ gbar1/2 scaling produces the observed RAR shape. Deriving the exact RAR curve from BeeTheory is the immediate next theoretical task.
6. Next Steps — From 20 to 175 Galaxies
- Blind test on the remaining 155 SPARC galaxies. With K0 = 0.3759 and c = 6.40 frozen, apply BeeTheory to the 155 galaxies not used in the fit.
- Separate gas and stellar disk sources. The HI gas disk extends to about 1.7Rd beyond the stellar disk. Including it as a separate BeeTheory source would likely resolve both outliers.
- Derive K0 and c from first principles. The theoretical BeeTheory derivation should predict K0/Rd from the wave-mass postulate applied to an exponential disk.
- Test on LSB and dwarf galaxies. Low surface brightness galaxies are the hardest test. BeeTheory must reproduce these without special treatment.
Data: Lelli, F., McGaugh, S. S., Schombert, J. M., SPARC: Mass Models for 175 Disk Galaxies with Spitzer Photometry and Accurate Rotation Curves, AJ 152, 157, 2016.
RAR: McGaugh, S. S., Lelli, F., Schombert, J. M., PRL 117, 201101, 2016.
BTFR: Lelli, F. et al., ApJ 816, 2016.
BeeTheory: Dutertre, X., BeeTheory.com v2, 2023, extended 2025.
Mass-to-light: Υ★ = 0.5 M⊙/L⊙ at 3.6 μm, McGaugh & Schombert 2014.