And finally, why does everyone use the words Universe and Space like they're interchangeable? What, the concept that the Universe exists within the Space is that impossible? It would even explain acceleration of the universe's expansion.
In my concept of the universe (may or may not chime with more learned exponents of cosmological theory) you can envision the unviverse as the surface of a balloon, as can you the 'space' as we know it. The three space dimensions and one time of our common experience (and maybe more) being analogised into the two dimensions of the balloon surface. And while the balloon surface curves in a third dimension, this is not relevent to the perceivable universe and what we call 'space', except perhaps as something the universe 'curves' into. 'Spacetime' in the 'Universe' [ii]is[/i] the surface of the balloon. Both of them the same (and maybe more of the dimensionalities).
Maybe gravitational bending of space time is depressions (or bumps, there's virtually no difference in topology at the small scale at least[1]) upon the surface of the Universal Balloon Surface, or maybe that's some other quality to the surface (much as electricla potential, etc, might be, although ultimately it all probably unifies) and that surface topology means something else (maybe the texture dictates the 'unificication' quality), especially as frames of reference carry their own interpretations of various different potentials.
While traditionally the surface-of-the-balloon example is used to show expansion of the universe (by pumping up the balloon) pushing galaxies apart without them 'travelling' over the surface, an interesting by-product of the analogy is that you can instead imagine it as a 'static' history-encompassing model of the universe where 'latitude' on the balloon's surface as represents time, and the longitude (a single dimension in our "balloon", but representing all other dimensions in the 'metaverse' version.
In this version you can see 'slices' of the universe for any given 'universal' time. (Noting that you can also cut your time slices diagonally across the surface, or perhaps represent them as an intersection of a conic or double-conic shape, its origin possibly at the North Pole but angled accordingly, which would give numerous 'slices' across the universe that may be indistinguishable to slice inhabitants.
The slice intersecting the North Pole of the 'balloon' shows a singularity that is 'the start of time', as does the 'South Pole'[2] which might be your 'end of the universe', complete with Restaurant if you so wish. Everywhere inbetween is a ring of universe, without border but finite, causality (trivially) feeding southward, though at every point other than at either pole causality can 'head' directions generally southward but not directly south.
(The analogy might break down when you consider the geometry of non-longitudinal Great Circle journeys, which at their northern and southern extremes find themselves angling past the 'causality limit' angle, and eventually back northward, but imagine a 'drip down' force that probably explains 'expansion' and any inexorably leading into the end-of-time contraction.)
Additionally, considering time in such a way (as lines of latitude, or similar) and considering the Universal Balloon as an entity sat within the (out of our experience[3]) meta-universal dimensions, it means that the the question "What Is North Of THe North Pole?" is very much an apt response to the age-old "So What [Caused|Happened Before] The Big Bang?" question that Big Bang sceptics tend to roll out.
But maybe hyperdimensional systems aren't your bag, or you can't envision them. If so, sorry. And I hope you haven't read all the above for nothing.
[1] Though if the above is a good analogy, a sufficiently large scale (say across 1/4 the size of the universe, in all dimensions including time) might reveal whether any distortions such as this bulge 'in' or 'out' of the nominal 'meta-space' balloon shape.
[2] Although if you're not too keen on the "Big Crunch" ending of the universe and think it expands forever, the balloon could be considered an infinite 'bell' shape, with no lower extreme.
[3] The whole M-Dimensions theory where we are 20 dimensions in 21 (or however many it is, these days) would fit that. A 20-dimensional 'balloon surface' in a 21-dimensional meta-universe. And with who knows how many other universal balloons are eternally sat there, differing sizes and compositions in each bubble, with wildly different bubble surfaces giving universes variously viable for intelligences like ourselves or totally unlike ourselves or totally devoid of intelligence or even totally devoid of 'features'. Now,
that's something worth speculating about. In my opinion, of course.