Time loop: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
mNo edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
A '''time loop''', known technically as a ''chronic hysteresis'' was a loop in time, in which the individuals are always experiencing the same events in an endless loop.
A '''time loop''', known technically as a ''chronic hysteresis'', was a loop in time, in which the individuals are always experiencing the same events in endless repetition.


An accurate time loop took little energy to perpetuate. An incomplete time loop (where each repetition was not the same as the last or the loops were not the same length) this required energy to work, with the energy increasing with each loop. ([[NSA]]: ''[[The Pirate Loop]]'')
An accurate time loop took little energy to perpetuate. An incomplete time loop (where each repetition was not the same as the last or the loops were not the same length) required more energy to work, with the energy increasing with each loop. ([[NSA]]: ''[[The Pirate Loop]]'')


The [[Third Doctor]] attempted to explain the concept to [[the Brigadier]] and [[Jo Grant]] as a "[[recursion|loop in time]]". ([[DW]]: ''[[The Claws of Axos]]'')
The [[Third Doctor]] attempted to explain the concept to [[the Brigadier]] and [[Jo Grant]] as a "[[recursion|loop in time]]". ([[DW]]: ''[[The Claws of Axos]]'')

Revision as of 00:56, 15 April 2010

A time loop, known technically as a chronic hysteresis, was a loop in time, in which the individuals are always experiencing the same events in endless repetition.

An accurate time loop took little energy to perpetuate. An incomplete time loop (where each repetition was not the same as the last or the loops were not the same length) required more energy to work, with the energy increasing with each loop. (NSA: The Pirate Loop)

The Third Doctor attempted to explain the concept to the Brigadier and Jo Grant as a "loop in time". (DW: The Claws of Axos)

While there was no known technological method of escaping a time loop, the Doctor and Romana were able to break a time loop by deliberately recreating the events of the loop out of phase with the loop itself. (DW: Meglos)

Presumably this method could work on any time loop, but, while achievable in a time loop of two people in a small room, would be nearly impossible to do in a time loop on a planetary scale.

Notable uses of time loops