phinds :
You will find this discussion interesting I think; starts in 2007, and it is long but worth the read thru 2007 at least;
Wallace has some interesting insights...he IS a cosmologist...:
Does space expand
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=162727&highlight=current+flow&page=2
Wallace:
"What do you think? When Cosmologist talk about the expansion of the universe, it is often phrased as space itself expanding. For instance, interpreting cosmological redshifts as due to the photons being 'stretched' as they pass through expanding space, rather than being due to a doppler shift (since for instance at cosmological distances galaxies can be receding at greater than c and hence the doppler formula breaks down).
People use analogies to dots on a balloon or raisins in bread but this seems to imply that the expansion of space (the rubber or the bread) is what carries the galaxies (the dots or raisins) apart.
The idea the space expands has been attacked by various people, including the well respected John Peacock. See here, click on the link 'Expanding Space'
Do people agree with this? Is Expanding Space a 'dangerous idea' or a necessary interpretation of the GR equations for FRW universes? The maths is not in dispute, but the interpretation seems to be..."
A few post examples:
""Expansion of space" is a completely wrong terminology.
It implies that space is some sort of a substance that can expand and contract.
That an observer measures a change in distance is perfectly valid in relativity but it has nothing to do with an expansion or contraction of space.
"Photon's being streched by exanding space" is another one these absurd phrases.
That an emitter and an absorber of a photon measures a different frequency is perfectly valid in relativity but it has nothing to do with a change in the state of the photon."Marcus:
"Mainstream professional cosmologists (Wallace is one, SpaceTiger also) use a particular model (associated with names Friedman Lemaitre Roberson Walker and abbreviated FRW sometimes) into which you can plug various parameters ---and it gives you nice simple solutions to the main (Einstein) equation that you can try to fit to observational data.
And this FRW model has an idea of universal time..."Pervect:
"While it may not make sense to use a pure FRW metric to describe a bound system, there are some papers that take the approach of using for instance a Schwarzschild De-sitter metric..."
Marcus
"...there is NO problem of "where extra space comes from" because space is not a material substance-----it is just the distances between things a web of geometric relations----you DONT HAVE TO MAKE MORE..."
Depending on whether you want to make your balloon analogy discussion a career or not, perhaps a 'basic' and advanced section would help clarify things for different readers...