Probability waveform

According to the First Doctor, points in history became fixed once a probability waveform had collapsed. (AUDIO: Daybreak, The Vardan Invasion of Mirth) As "all the commentaries agree", it was dangerous at this point to interfere, (AUDIO: Daybreak) as one could create a catastrophic paradox. (AUDIO: The Vardan Invasion of Mirth)

Such fixed points could be brought about, for instance, by learning about the nature of one's own death. The Eleventh Doctor explained that time could not be rewritten once its precise details had been read, or observed. "Once we know what's coming, it's written in stone." (TV: The Angels Take Manhattan) Once Teddy Baxter saw a biodata projection of his future, his survival up to that point became fixed. (AUDIO: The Vardan Invasion of Mirth)

On realising Teddy's future was fixed, the First Doctor expressed surprise at the Vardans not recognising the state of a probability waveform, as they held the capacity to travel along and manipulate any spatial wavelength. (AUDIO: The Vardan Invasion of Mirth)

Behind the scenes
Probability waves were first proposed by, who personally maintained that he would "like to regard a probability wave, even in 3N-dimensional space, as a real thing, certainly as more than a tool for ", as more than simply an abstract, descriptive function which conveniently helps make consistent statistical predictions about quantum phenomena. Either way, mathematically, a probability wave is described by its wave function.

The First Doctor, here, is referring to, as studied in quantum mechanics, which occurs when a wave function in a (ie. with multiple possible ) is "observed" (measured), and thus collapses into one singular possibility. In this sense, the writers of Daybreak and The Vardan Invasion of Mirth are drawing a connection between fixed points in time — as introduced in BBC Wales Doctor Who — and analogous concepts found in modern quantum theory.

Though wave functions exist in the DWU, no connection has yet been made explicit.