For a deeper understanding of electromagnetism, check out part A polarizer only allows EM waves to pass for which the electric field vector matches its direction of polarization. I believe the void particles are slightly offset themselves, similar to 3D content having two offset images.
If we remember that in Doctor Who, void stuff is essentially the residue of something that exists outside of time and space, it might make sense that the speckles are in slightly two different places at once, and different colors at that.
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Join now! Radha has a PhD in theoretical quantum physics. In her free time, she cosplays and irritates her three cats. I decided it was more trouble than it was worth. This is from the very early waves of Doctor Who, when the backer was carboard with a standard bubble.
The bubble looks like the Tardis and that fits into the design. I always loved this card, in fact I miss it. The Doctor is readily visible in the card.
The back of the package shows off the rest of the figures in the series and one look will tell you where we were at this point. Still very early on as most the characters come from Season 1. That proved popular and the demand was soon for a full fledged Doctor Who toy line. The basic body sculpt is quite good. Only a couple of the Doctor's incarnations — the first and eleventh — actually used glasses correctively. The First Doctor sometimes wore a pair of wire-rimmed spectacles, but it wasn't known until after he regenerated that he actually required them to correct myopia.
Real glasses. TV : The War Machines. The newly regenerated Second Doctor briefly donned these on Vulcan to examine the murdered Examiner 's badge before realising he could see perfectly well and didn't need reading glasses anymore. TV : The Snowmen. The First Doctor carried a pair of opera glasses in his pocket. He used them for his first glimpses of the Dalek City on Skaro. TV : The Empty Child. Fake glasses. TV : Tooth and Claw. The Fifth Doctor typically wore a pair of glasses in times of great stress, especially following his regeneration.
TV : Castrovalva The Tenth Doctor wore a pair of tortoise-shell rimmed square glasses, usually when he was concentrating on a particular object or subject, indicating either extreme interest or "action mode".
TV : Tooth and Claw , etc. The older incarnation claimed that both these and the Fifth Doctor's half-moon glasses — dubbing them " brainy specs " — were not at all medically necessary but worn just because they made the two Doctors "look a bit clever". TV : Time Crash. Info from television stories can't be added here until after the top or bottom of the hour , British time , closest to the end credits roll on BBC One. Therefore, fans in the Americas who are sensitive to spoilers should avoid Tardis on Sundays until they've seen the episode.
The Tenth Doctor wears 3D glasses. TV : Doomsday. TV : The Day of the Doctor. By the early 21st century , televisions were capable of 3D broadcasting.
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