Yes, I was reluctant to use the term "absolute" myself.<br /><br />But I'm thinking that if the absorption and emission lines in the spectrum of a distant object are shifted by the expansion of space as the light passes through that space, that change would be "absolute". The light would be actually changed by a definite amount (dependent on the rate of expansion whilst the light travelled through that space).<br /><br />There may not be an absolute, correct, reference frame, as you say, and so measurements of that light would be contaminated by the relative inertial movements and gravities of the emitter and the observer. But the amount that the expansion of space had changed that light by would be a <i>definite</i> figure. The difference from that definite figure in an observers measurement would be due <i>purely</i> to the gravitational and relativistic doppler component of the redshift.<br /><br />In modern cosmology, once any "normal" object (i.e. not a black hole or something) is redshifted over z=0.1 we consider that nearly all that redshift is cosmological in nature - the relativistic doppler and gravitational components would be only a tiny fraction of the overall shift, and the rest is due to the expansion of space.<br /><br />Once we look past z=1.5 we have an apparent recession speed that is superluminal, so it wouldn't matter what the observers relative inertial velocity was - whatever frame of reference they are in they would measure the object to be receding faster than light. (Even if you travel at 0.9999c you see light move away from you at c, receding from you at 300,000 km/s).<br /><br />The concept of the metric expansion of space is that distances only apparently increase <i>outside</i> of gravity-bound systems. Where gravity binds objects, the expansion causes no increase in the relative distances of those objects. In effect this means that space only measurably expands in the voids in between the galactic clusters. All the other clusters outside of our <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> <p><font color="#ff0000">_______________________________________________<br /></font><font size="2"><em>SpeedFreek</em></font> </p> </div>