Why the tardis is cool




















Travel through time and space with Doctor Who! Crack open a bottle of your favorite cold beverage and hear sounds from Doctor Who as you pull off the cap! Socks or Jocks. These Flip Flop Socks are perfect for beach bums everywhere. With their blue and white striped soles, funky blue straps and even knobbly ankle detailing, wearing these socks is almost as good as lazing around on warm sands Shoot some hoops and sink some beer!

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It was also laid out on different levels for the first time, and had telepathic controls that worked by sticking your hand in a load of goo. The steely grey space still had a hexagonal console, but everything else was very different, and the control room was more stripped back and functional.

The Eleventh Doctor was the first occupant of this version, but it was the Twelfth who really made it his home, adding plenty of bookshelves, a workshop and chalk boards to scribble all his ideas and calculations down on. In the middle is the usual hexagonal bank of controls and gadgets arranged around a beautiful, golden central column.

Historically, the control room has only been a tiny part of the TARDIS — with lots of corridors to more incredible rooms leading off from it. Who knows what else the Doctor, Graham, Yaz and Ryan will discover! You can pre-order it here. Share Copy Link. I really like it! Second choice When the Fourth Doctor got fed up of the same old control room, he remembered he had another one hidden way, and started using that instead! Together they combine to create the fabric of space-time in which all the matter in the universe exists.

Massive objects, like stars and galaxies, stretch and curve this fabric into themselves. Physicists don't really know how space-time warps, but it's theoretically possible to fold one of those curves back on itself, creating what's called a closed time-like curve CTC.

The objects inside the loop in the graphic are called light cones. Light cones mark the boundaries of space-time that any one event like the burst of light from a supernova explosion can reach. For example, imagine you're standing at the red dot in the diagram below. Time is on the y-axis left and space is on the x-axis bottom :. The area enclosed by the white lines is everything you can see without traveling at the speed of light.

If a star exploded 10 light-years away from you orange dot , then it would take 10 years for light from that event to reach you. The only way to get outside of a light cone is by traveling faster than the speed of light.

Normally light cones are arranged in a straight line, because time moves in a straight line like the right side of the diagram below. But CTCs tip light cones , making it possible to travel backward and forward in time, like the left side of the diagram:.

It would look kind of like the following graphic from Tippet and Tsang's paper. No world-saving space traveler would be very effective just traveling in a circle. So Tippet and Tsang outlined a mathematical formula to chop up different space-time curves and splice them back together; basically, a way to form tunnels that could transport you to any time and place. The opening sequence of Doctor Who episodes shows the TARDIS moving through space-time in a motion that actually kind of mimics these proposed tunnels, minus the clouds and lightning:.

In later episodes, where the Doctor travels into the future, the space-time vortex in the opening credits appears red instead of blue.



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