The statement of this post, is distilled from the collaboration of some of the images to follow.
In cosmic string developement there are these three points to consider.
I am always looking for this imagery that helps define further what gravitational lensing might have signified in our perception of these distances in space. How the cosmic string might have exemplified itself in some determination, as we find Lubos has done in the calculation of the mass and size of this early event. This image to follow explains all three developemental points.
Bashing Branes by Gabriele Veneziano
String theory suggests that the big bang was not the origin of the universe but simply the outcome of a preexisting state
The developers of the ekpyrotic theory initially hoped that the weakness of the forces would allow the bounce to be analyzed more easily, but they were still confronted with a difficult high-curvature situation, so the jury is out on whether the scenario truly avoids a singularity. Also, the ekpyrotic scenario must entail very special conditions to solve the usual cosmological puzzles. For instance, the about-to-collide branes must have been almost exactly parallel to one another, or else the collision could not have given rise to a sufficiently homogeneous bang. The cyclic version may be able to take care of this problem, because successive collisions would allow the branes to straighten themselves.
The most strongest image that brought this together for me was in understanding what Neil Turok and Paul Steinhardt developed for us. It was watching the animation of the colliding branes that I saw the issue clarify itself. But before this image deeply helped, I saw the issue clearly in another way as well.
The processes of intercommuting and loop production.
It was very important from a matter distinction, to understand the clumping mechanism that reveals itself, after this resulting images of the galaxy formation recedes in the colliding brane scenrio viewing. If such clumping is to take place, we needed a way in which to interpret this.




