A.T. said:
Then draw a picture of two states of that motion at two different time points for
three circles arranged in a line, with static configuration (all separation distances are constant).
There would be no difference from two, it's just saying that the rate of expansion or contraction or however you want to describe the situation is in equilibrium such that the distance between the circles are constant through time with the circles.
It wouldn't look any different, just the pictures would be different sizes
If you cannot tell the difference to the standard model, it cannot be disproven, but is just as usefull as the
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=104076&p=869356"
Please, be patient. This is just an analogy, and it's not a complete idea, I still have some problems that I haven't thought out, like the one you brought up about centrifuges.
I don't think it's like the hollow Earth theory - or any other crackpot theory, The way I hope people understand it is that it's just a different way of looking at the same thing. I just think it is a more precise model, to take into account all the ways the appearance of a motion can be interpreted.
But here is why it is useful; if I brake down the universe into 2 parts, and for simplicities sake let's just for now, disregard any rotations or centrifugal forces.
you have one quantity which is a mass, which again for simplicities' sake will say to only have one property, and this property is expansion
The other quantity will be 'empty' volumetric space, which also has an expansionary property.
For mass, we will say that it has a much greater expansion rate, than that of 'empty' volumetric space. and for every volume of mass, it expands at 1.5 times the rate of an equal volume of volumetric space.
for now, we will make the assumption that you may superimpose mass and empty volumetric space, that volumetric space cannot superimpose itself and that also mass cannot superimpose itself either.
Now imagine having three of these pieces of mass side by side to one another, since they cannot superimpose themselves they grow outward, so the accelerated expansion rate from the center adds, the radius would expand in this case 2.25x faster than empty space (maybe a little less). The more mass you have side by side, the more the difference in expansion between the body of mass, and the empty space around it.
Now if you can imagine it, with these rules you can create a pseudo-gravitational effect in some ways it mimicks gravity quite well. It even kind of succeeds to explain dark energy - to a certain extent however it fails to explain certain phenomenon, like shearing, and rotation and stuff like that, I have an idea to fix this problem but it gets pretty complicated.