I don't think that information has been published.
TARDIS in the Doctor Who Series stands for Time And Relative Dimension In Space. The TARDIS was first seen in the first Doctor Who episode in 1963 with William Hartnell as the Doctor. Susan, the Doctor's granddaughter, claimed to have coined the acronym TARDIS from its name in that first episode.
The TARDIS is bigger o the inside because it is a completely different dimension, almost as if when you step throw the TARDIS door you are stepping from one place to another. I think its called trans-indental dimensions, but don't trust my spelling on that (I got it off SJA).
Such a question is meaningless. The Tardis can leave one place and arrive at another five minutes (or a million years) earlier. How fast is that? For the crew of the Tardis there is a delay between the time the Tardis dematerialized and the time when it rematerializes. This subjective experience of the Tardis travellers is not related to the distance or time external to the tardis and cannot be used to measure speed as we know it. If it takes five minutes to go two metres and also takes five minutes to go 200 billion miles is it going 24 metres an hour or 24 hundred billion miles an hour? Perhaps it is simplest to say that the Tardis does not travel through time and space as we understand it, and so cannot have speed as we understand it.
Movies use additive color, also known as RGB color. Colored light is projected onto a screen, so the end visual is reflective, but the color is additive RGB.
The RGB color coordinates for white are:R=255G=255B=255
red green blue
The T.A.R.D.I.S. (time and relative dimensions in space) is a dark blue.
RGB has a larger gamut than CMYK. In order from small to large: sRGB, AdobeRGB, ProPhoto RGB. The largest of the CMYK gamut is GRACoL.
Make a car. Choose the RGB. You now have the colour for the car.
The new series Daleks in Doctor Who are typically a metallic bronze color. Their exact RGB value may vary slightly between episodes and designs, but a common representation is around RGB 172, 109, 77 for a bronze-like color.
Most likely blue (like the TARDIS) and orange (he wants to be ginger, also Gallifrey).
No..Absolutly Not...VGA is Video Graphics Adapter..it is used to Convert the Signals to Video Format...RGB (Red GREEN BLUE) is the Terminiology which is Used to get the Colurs from the Colour Tone producer..
Either by using a palette (color map) or by using RGB values.
No ,it is not negativeactually. RGB is short for R-Red G-Green B-Blue This is what TV's and computer monitors use in a similar process as CMYK. A web logo is RGB color profile and can be 72 dpi (since screen resolution is only this high). Should not be saved as vector art. So I think RGB colour is valuable.
The TARDIS (Time and Relative Dimension in Space) has undergone several exterior changes throughout the history of "Doctor Who." The exact number of times varies depending on the inclusion of subtle modifications, but there have been around 14 major redesigns of the TARDIS exterior.
Unlike the primary colors in art, red, blue, and yellow, the three primary colors in light for photography and electronics is red, green, and blue, or RGB. The RGB color model does not use different tones of red, green, and blue.