Pohan said:
Where can I read theories on ... what gave rise to the big bang?
There is an area of research called "quantum cosmology". One way to find research articles on conditions around the start of expansion, and what could have led up to it, is just to do a keyword search in the professional literature. Here are the "quantum cosmology" research papers since 2009:
"quantum cosmology" since 2009, Inspire search:
http://inspirehep.net/search?ln=en&...search=Search&sf=&so=d&rm=citation&rg=25&sc=0 (647 found as of 27 Jan 2014)
"quantum cosmology" or "ekpyrotic" Inspire search:
http://inspirehep.net/search?ln=en&...search=Search&sf=&so=d&rm=citation&rg=25&sc=0 (698 as of 27 Jan)
"quantum cosmology" and not "loop" since 2009, Inspire search:
http://inspirehep.net/search?ln=en&...search=Search&sf=&so=d&rm=citation&rg=25&sc=0 (322 as of 27 Jan)
You can see that about half the QC papers are Loop Quantum Cosmology (LQC) which gets rid of the singularity by shifting over to a QUANTUM version of gravity. Then quantum effects cause gravity to REPELL rather than attract, at extremely high density. A contracting phase of the universe would reach extreme density and REBOUND rather than collapse into a "singularity".
According to this theory the idea of a "singularity" (infinite density) is unrealistic. It is a failure of the classical (pre-quantum) theory of general relativity that it predicts collapse to an unnatural infinite density. LQC predicts a "big bounce" occurring at a high, but nevertheless finite density.
LQC is only about half of the QC research. About half use various alternative non-loop models.
LQC is a class of cosmic models, from some of which TESTABLE PREDICTIONS have been derived.
Some of the first 20 or 30 papers that you see in the QC listing are about LQC testable predictions. this is called "QC phenomenology" (i.e. what phenomena to look for in the sky, especially the CMB ancient light, the cosmic microwave background).
Phenomenology authors to look for are Aurelien Barrau, Julien Grain, and their co-authors.
There is also a class of models under the name "ekpyrotic" which don't all come up when you use the keywords "quantum cosmology". You can see that adding that additional keyword to the search will get you about 50 more papers, bringing the total from 647 up to 698.
In the ekpyrotic models there is a different kind of bounce, not caused by quantum gravity corrections at high density. There is currently not much research devoted to that so I won't discuss it, but others here might want to.