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The TARDIS is a time machine that can travel through space, time and dimensions. TARDIS is an abbreviation of Time and Relative Dimension in Space. According to the Doctor, TARDIS are not 'made', they are grown from a special coral found on Gallifrey.
We don't know. The number of rooms in the TARDIS is potentially infinite. As we learned in the episode "The Doctor's Wife", the TARDIS has the ability to redesign itself and "archive" older rooms.
The TARDIS is a Type 40 time and relative dimension in space machine used by the Time Lords in the TV show "Doctor Who." It is much larger on the inside than the outside due to its time-travel capabilities. The TARDIS is capable of traveling to any point in time and space.
In "Doctor Who," the TARDIS is a time machine and spacecraft that appears as a 1960s British police box on the outside. The exterior dimensions are typically described as 3.3 meters in height, 2 meters in width, and 2 meters in depth. However, the interior is much larger, with various rooms and corridors stretching far beyond its outer dimensions due to Time Lord technology.
It was due to the fatal dase of radiation he'd received.
First Doctor- After his first encounter with the (original) Cybermen, the Doctor grows increasingly frail, due to old age, to the point of collapsing on the Tardis floor, where his body (and for this regeneration only, his clothes) changes. Second Doctor- Having been on the run from his own planet since the inception of the series, The Doctor needs the Time Lords help when he discovers fellow members of his race using illegal Time Scopes to try and create the perfect intergalactic army, even though he knows this will mean his own capture. At his trial, he is sentenced to exile on 20th Century Earth and forced to regenerate. Third Doctor- After a battle with giant spiders on Metebelis 3, the Doctor becomes poisoned with radiation. He manages to make it back to Earth in the Tardis, but then collapses and regenerates in UNIT's science lab. (NOTE- this is the first time the process is called 'regeneration' in the series) Fourth Doctor- The Master and the Doctor battle on top of a high tower, leaving the Doctor dangling from a cable. He slips to Earth, and while prone on the floor, the mysterious Watcher (who is seen at various points during the story) appears and merges with the Doctor to become... Fifth Doctor- The Doctor and companion Peri have been poisoned by a fatal chemical. They manage to get the antidote and escape to the Tardis, but the Doctor spills half of it en route. So he gives it to Peri and, after an inner struggle, he regenerates on the Tardis floor. Sixth Doctor- Renegade Time Lady, the Rani, causes the Tardis to crash. While his companion, Mel, is unharmed, it's enough to trigger the Doctor's regeneration process. (NOTE- actor Colin Baker had fallen out with the BBC, so refused to come back to film a regeneration scene. So the whole thing is a cobbled together, unemotional scene, with eventual Seventh Doctor, Sylvester McCoy doing it wearing a blond wig) Seventh Doctor- The Master has been executed by the Daleks, and the Doctor is charged with taking the remains back. However, the Master isn't as dead as was thought, and appears as a fluid, snake like figure, causing the Tardis to crash land in San Fransisco, New Years Eve 1999. Once there, the Doctor is shot by a street gang as soon as he opens the Tardis door. He regenerates in hospital, after being pronounced dead. Eighth Doctor- Unknown, but it is assumed by fans that it was possibly injury during the Great Time War between the Time Lords and the Daleks, in which many races suffered across the whole of Space-Time Ninth Doctor- His companion, Rose, absorbs energy from the heart of the Tardis, and will die. So the Doctor kisses her, enabling him to absorb the energy into himself. A short time later, he regenerates. Tenth Doctor- After a battle with the Master and the returning Time Lords, the Doctor finds former companion Donna's grandad, Wilfred, trapped in a booth that will soon be flooded with radiation. The Doctor makes a sacrifice and switches the power flow so he will take the whole dose. The Doctor then revisits some former companions, until the radiation finally takes it's toll and he regenerates in the Tardis, just above the Earth.
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The newest is at the time of writing Peter Capaldi, the most popular since relaunch was David Tennant, previously the most popular was Colin baker, the only doctor never to have moved from earth was John Pertwee due to the fact that the BBC did not have enough funding and therefore the Tardis was deemed un-repairable.
The Tardis materialized in the middle of a gang shoot-out. He got shot and was taken to a hospital where treatment to save his life actually finished him off due to his non-human biology. Due to the drugs he'd been administered with before death, his regeneration was delayed, but in the hospital morgue he regenerated into the 8th Doctor.
i dont know sorry i dont live in the us
You are always free to seek another opinion from another doctor, if you do not feel confident that your doctor has made the correct decisions or is not acting in your best interest.
As Aaways, consult with your personal physician first. That said, my doctor required an evening dosage due to a side affect of drowsiness.