ChristianG said:
You say the Big Bang happened everywhere. I have been lead to believe that it was a singularity that exploded which in turn affected everything. Rather than the singularity appearing in space, space came from the singularity. So, are you saying because the Big Bang was the entirety of space it occurred everywhere . Can you please elaborate on that so I understand it. Or point me somewhere that I can read on it.
Start with the universe at the present day. It is of unspecified size - might be just very large, or even infinite. The relative positions of large-scale structures in the universe remain unchanged as it evolves, only distances change.
Measure any number of distances between such large-scale structures in the universe. As you go back in time, those distances will be shorter and shorter by the same factor per unit time (which translates to higher average density in the universe). As you go further in time, those distances will be longer and longer (which means density will go down).
That's the Big Bang theory in a nutshell. It happened 'everywhere', since all distances are affected, regardless of where you measure them, in how large a universe (including infinite), and where you're standing.
You can calculate how fast the distances grow shorter as you go back, and that they all reach 0 in length (=infinite density), in a finite time. That's the singularity. It's a singularity in time, not in space.
You can't talk about space before singularity, since space is a separation between objects, and it's already 0 everywhere. In this sense, space 'came from' the singularity.
However, consider how you can't divide by 0. One way of understanding it, is that the function f(x)=1/x has a singularity at point 0. That is, its value goes to infinity (or minus infinity) as you approach zero. But it hardly means that the values the function depicts 'came from' the singularity at point 0.
One more thing to add, is that no cosmologist (I know of) considers the cosmological singularity an actual physical feature of the universe. Pretty much everyone sees it as an indication that the theory just doesn't correctly describe the very early moments in the history of the universe. Much like you can't divide by 0, you can't use use the BB theory at time 0.