cansay27 said:
From what I have gathered, M-theory states that there are 11 dimensions. We live in 3 of these dimensions(unless time is considered its own dimension), and I believe the common understanding is that these other 8 dimensions are incredibly small. At the time of the Big Bang, these 3 dimensions expanded along with the universe while the other remained small.
My question is this: Why did these other dimensions remain small? Also, if these dimensions had never expanded, does this mean that they would be found at the "center" of the universe?
Actually it is essential to include the time dimension if wording it they way you are. If you wanted to call m-theory a 10 dimension theory, ignoring time for the purposes of the conversation that would be different, but you can't consider it an 11 dimensional theory and ignore the time dimension because one of those 11 IS time. ex. if you said we lived in 3, and then there are 8 compactified dimensions, that is wrong. There are believed to be 7 extra spatial dimensions, not 8.
So we live in 3 space, 1 time, superstring theory predicts 6 small/curled up dimensions (most commonly referred to as a calabi-yau manifold, the shape that they take though we do not know which possible calabi-yau manifold configuration would be correct and there are many, if not an infinite amount of possibilities) and m-theory predicts one extra one. As for the properties of that extra dimension I can't really help on that with any confidence, I don't know enough about it. M-Theory does predict objects though called membranes which CAN be large/macroscopic in extent, they can be of different dimensions so for instance 2-branes, 5-branes, etc. and there is belief too of a 0-dimensional brane which seems to imply it is point-like, but a closed-loop string would be attached to it, giving it the needed Planck-scale size string-theory says every object must have or exceed.
If you're interested in how m-theory relates to cosmology one route you could research is brane-world cosmology, which suggests that we could be living on a 3-dimensional brane and provides ideas for what caused the big bang, etc. But again as marcus said that still probably belongs in beyond the standard model, as this is 100% speculation. String theory doesn't even have fully known equations yet, but rather approximations with which to make predictions, much less m-theory which even less is known about so it isn't even a mathematical curiosity that might not be true but makes the correct predictions, it is only potentially a mathematical curiosity when we know the full equations, and that curiosity could potentially be a real theory.