Submitted:
13 September 2025
Posted:
16 September 2025
Read the latest preprint version here
Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Core Principle
Assumptions (A1–A4)
- A1.
- A2.
- Photon number is conserved along the beam (no creation or absorption after emission; standard extinction corrections apply) [11].
- A3.
- Redshift is given observationally by a cumulative motion factor:
- A4.
- Temporal features stretch by the same factor:
Notation
| Symbol | Meaning |
| Cumulative motion factor (background observable mapping) | |
| Effective motion rate | |
| Normalized rate used in distance integrals | |
| Present value of | |
| Luminosity distance | |
| Angular diameter distance | |
| Intrinsic and observed surface brightness | |
| z | Redshift |
| Emission and observation cosmic times |
2.1. Redshift and Time Dilation
2.2. Surface Brightness and the Tolman Relation
2.3. Luminosity Distance and Background Degeneracy
Scope
3. Observational Fits
3.1. Supernova Time Dilation
3.2. Tolman Surface-Brightness Dimming
3.3. Luminosity Distance and Background Degeneracy
4. Distinguishing Features
5. Limitations and Future Work
6. Conclusion
Conflicts of Interest
References
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