taylaron said:
im simply trying to figure out what would be explained by my concept.
over the next billion years, as time goes on, more and more galaxies will be seen because their light will have had a chance to reach us
so what is called the "observable universe" (the part of the universe containing objects whose light has had time to reach us) is constantly becoming more POPULOUS. It contains more and more objects as time goes on.
so in this sense you are correct-----because of light finite speed the observable universe becomes more populated, more numerous, more teeming with galaxies, with time. You could say that they "appear out of thin air".
THIS EFFECT HAS NOT BEEN NOTICED YET because we have only been cataloging galaxies using decent telescopes for a few decades, so our observable universe is only a few tens of lightyears larger now than when we started. Improvement in telescope techology is much more significant in extending our horizon.
But even though the effect has not been noticed, everybody knows it is going on.
However THIS IS NOT WHAT IS MEANT BY EXPANSION.
What astronomers mean by expansion is that DISTANCES BETWEEN THINGS ARE INCREASING.
this is a totally different thing from what you are talking about (you are talking about there getting to be more galaxies we can see------astronomers are talking about distances between ones we can see are measurably increasing----they are measurably getting farther and farther apart).
this is why your question does not make sense----you do not make a correct use of the word "expanding" as normally understood in cosmology.
I agree with selfAdjoint----what you say is disconnected from talk about the expansion of the universe (i.e. "not even wrong"---just off in another direction)