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Yes, light does slow down when it travels through matter, as it interacts with atoms and molecules in the material. This slowing down of light is responsible for effects like refraction and dispersion.
The answer to this riddle is time. Time is constantly changing and flowing, moving in a cycle that never ends.
You can make a great time machine with paper clips and yarn! The time machines I have experienced look very similar to Doctor Who's Tardis. To make this at home, you would ideally need some cardboard as well so you could fashion the front of your time machine into a blue police box. That can also be your base to paper clip your yarn to. Measure out several long strands of yard to form the walls for the back of your machine, and remember that a Tardis is much larger on the inside than it looks on the outside. If you need stabilizing poles for your Tardis, straighten out some larger paper clips and use them as anchors for your yarn. Continue your construction in a tent-like fashion. You can also form your paperclips into different shapes to make your controls for the inside of your Tardis. Some imagination is required, but see the related link for a visual reference.
There is currently no know and confirmed way to travel in time.
Time travels forwards not backwards.
The Doctor, a Time Lord from the planet Gallifrey, travels through time in the TARDIS, a time machine that appears in the British TV show "Doctor Who".
The Doctor from the TV show Doctor Who.
The Tardis.
Doctor Who travels in a time machine/spaceship called the TARDIS, which stands for "Time And Relative Dimension In Space." The TARDIS is bigger on the inside than on the outside, and can blend in with its surroundings by appearing as a blue police box from the outside.
The time traveller in the "Doctor Who" show, who flies in the TARDIS, is simply known as "The Doctor". The show never reveals his real name.
If you mean building a container that is bigger on the inside or that can travel through time, with our technology, you cannot, as it is virtually impossible. However, it is quite possible to build a TARDIS replica. Many people have done it, and posted videos on the internet
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.
The TARDIS is a time machine and spacecraft in the science fiction TV series "Doctor Who." It's a blue British police box on the outside, but inside it is much larger and contains various rooms and corridors. The TARDIS is also capable of traveling through time and space.
The TARDIS is a time machine and spacecraft used by the Doctor in the TV show Doctor Who to travel through time and space. It is also a vessel that serves as the Doctor's home and base of operations. Additionally, the TARDIS is known for its ability to blend into its surroundings by changing its appearance on the outside.
It is built to dematerialize and travel through space and time, re-materializing upon arrival. It does this via Huron Energy. If you mean how does the effect happen on tv, the camera is locked in position, and the tardis is wheeled out of the frame. Then in post production they simply cross dissolve it out between the frame with the tardis in, and the one with it out, bumping the opacity up and down as it reaches 0%.
The TARDIS acronym stands for Time and Relative Dimension in Space.
Tardis (Time And Relative Dimension In Space) Is A Blue Police Telephone Box Which Can Travel Through Time And Space. It is used in the Sci-fi TV series 'Doctor Who'. It is both a time machine and a spacecraft.