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  1. Dr. Sheldon Lee Cooper, PhD. é um personagem fictício dos seriados de televisão estadunidense The Big Bang Theory (2007-2019) e Young Sheldon (2017-), interpretado por Jim Parsons e Iain Armitage [1]

    • Overview
    • Biography
    • Characterization
    • Traits Perceived by Other Characters as Annoying
    • Childlike Qualities
    • Interests
    • Physical Appearance

    "I apologize if I haven't been the friend you deserve. But I want you to know, in my way, I love you all."

    Sheldon Cooper to his friends,

    Sheldon Lee Cooper, B.Sc., M.Sc., M.A., Ph.D., Sc.D., is a Caltech theoretical physicist. Next to his best friend Leonard Hofstadter, he's the main protagonist of The Big Bang Theory and the titular protagonist of Young Sheldon.

    Originally from East Texas, Sheldon started college at the age of 11 in 1991, receiving his first Ph.D. at the age of 16. As a kid, Sheldon was involved in numerous experiments as a "wunderkind," such as his plan to provide free electricity for his hometown by building a nuclear reactor - a plan that government pen-pushers stopped, claiming that it is illegal to store yellowcake uranium in a garden shed. Proudly geeky, he has no qualms about speaking Klingon, wearing vintage t-shirts sporting super-hero logos, or spouting various historical and cultural anecdotes (e.g., his account of the introduction of the fork into Thailand). While he may claim to be the perfect human specimen, Sheldon does have his faults. Sheldon is characterized by a strict adherence to routine and hygiene, an overly intellectual personality, a tenuous understanding of irony, sarcasm and humor, and a general lack of humility or empathy, the former of which is demonstrated in the fact that he has no problem voicing to his peers his admiration for his superior intellect. These qualities, along with his penchant for pranks, are his character's main source of humor. He is often considered to be the most iconic character of the show. Sheldon has developed a more sociable personality due to the influences of his friends especially his friend Penny and his wife Amy.

    Early life

    Sheldon was born alongside his twin sister Missy on February 26, 1980, in a Kmart in Galveston, Texas to the late George Cooper Sr. and Mary Cooper and was officiated at the Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He has an older brother named George Cooper Jr., who, along with Missy, is described by their mother to be "dumb as soup." Sheldon was raised according to his mother's Evangelical Christian doctrines, (i.e., learning how to pray and becoming the co-captain of the East Texan Christian Youth Holy Roller Bowling League Championship team and seven-to-twelve year-old division). Meanwhile, he was forced to watch football by his father. Like any typical nerd, Sheldon was bullied a lot during his childhood, mostly because he constantly expressed intellectual superiority to his peers as he still does now. The bullying consisted of, but was not limited to, being beaten up, getting wedgies, being stuffed in small spaces, and having his personal belongings stolen. This is further accentuated when he tells Amy Farrah Fowler that the memories of his upbringing were tantamount to that of an insufferably tantalizing "hell." Further anecdotes also reveal that he built a so-called "Sonic Death Ray" that failed even to slow down the neighbor kids (all it did was annoy their dog), and constructed an armed robot using integrated circuits from ceramic semiconductor substrates cooked in Missy's modified Easy-Bake Oven, to defend his room from Missy (whose eyebrows were burned off as a result of a malfunction). Sheldon was also beaten up by his brother and sister, with Missy usually kicking Sheldon in his crotch and Georgie farting on his head while Sheldon tries to watch Star Trek. When Sheldon was five years old, his Pop-Pop died. Sheldon missed him and wanted him back and asked Santa to bring him back, but it didn't happen and this soured Sheldon so much that he disliked Christmas altogether. Since the age of 9, he had been dreaming about going to the Large Hadron Collider. (In "The Large Hadron Collision" (S3E15), he voiced those dreams.) Sheldon formerly despised birthday parties because he shared his birthday with his twin sister. Missy and her childhood friends tricked Sheldon that Batman was coming and he waited the whole afternoon at the door and all that came was a robin that flew in the window. He never wanted one after that, until his friends threw him an enjoyable birthday party in "The Celebration Experimentation." As a kid, Sheldon wrote a paper entitled "A Proof That Algebraic Topology Can Never Have A Non-Self-Contradictory Set Of Abelian Groups" and his grade school science project paper, with the original title "A Rederivation of Maxwell’s Equations Regarding Electromagnetism," contains an approach that may change the way how ferromagnetic hysteresis is calculated. Despite his misgivings about being called a 'rocket scientist' as an adult, at nine years old, the boy genius wrote "Rocket Reentry & Retropropulsion" in a composition notebook; this provides the solution to the VTVL problem discreetly employed by Elon Musk years later for his successful SpaceX CRS-8 mission. While Sheldon audited Dr. John Sturgis' quantum chromodynamics course at East Texas Tech at 9, as Medford High School no longer academically challenged him, Sheldon formally entered college at 11. At 12, filled with disappointment at not receiving a titanium centrifuge to separate radioactive isotopes, he had to be flown to a hospital by helicopter to be treated for radiation burns following a mishap when he built a CAT scanner, which also resulted in the death of his sister's guinea pig, "Snowball." He also, at this time, conducted experiments involving the height of stairs only to deduce that if a step on a staircase is two millimeters off or more, a person is likely to trip - his findings are evidenced by his father breaking his clavicle. When Sheldon was 13, he attempted to build a nuclear reactor in order to provide free electricity for his town, but it failed after a government agent informed him that it was illegal to store "yellowcake" uranium inside a shed; he then erupted as a result. During that same year, he walked in on his father having sex with Mary who was roleplaying a german girl named "Helga", however, Sheldon thought that was another woman, and Sheldon decided to start knocking three times to prevent walking in on anything like that again. When Sheldon was fourteen years old, he graduated college East Texas Tech summa cum laude as Valedictorian, began graduate school at the California Institute of Technology, and was the youngest person at the time to receive the Stevenson Award at "fourteen and a half." He received his first doctorate at the age of sixteen, and he then spent four years on his second dissertation before obtaining his current position. In 1994, his father died due to a heart attack in "A New Home and a Traditional Texas Torture" (S7E12 YS). In "The Pancake Batter Anomaly" (S1E11), Sheldon said, at the age of 15, he got sick in Germany, and his mother had to fly back to Texas to help his dad at that time. This creates a continuity error in the episodes "The Thanksgiving Decoupling" (S7E9) and "The Proton Transmogrification" (S7E22) because Sheldon mentions to Bernadette's father Mike and to the ghost of Professor Proton, respectively, that his father died when he was 14. When Sheldon graduated from college at 14, he got accepted into Caltech. Though he was planning to move in together with Tam, Tam found a girlfriend and decided to stay in Texas instead. This explains Sheldon not having spoken to Tam for a long time. It's unknown when he moved into The Apartment Building with Sebastian before he drove him out, and he met Stuart Bloom and the comic book store. In 2003, Leonard moved in with Sheldon after all his previous roommates could not stand him.

    Later life

    A few minor details of Sheldon's later life have been revealed through his narration in Young Sheldon. In Vanilla Ice Cream, Gentlemen Callers, and a Dinette Set Sheldon states that he would have children whom he would draw up contracts with similar to the ones he'd made with friends and family over the years. At the end of Graduation, Sheldon mentions that he held a graduation party for his son Leonard, who was named after possibly after his best friend and roomate. Sheldon also mentioned he wanted to name him after Leonard Nimoy but Amy refused so they agreed to just Leonard. An argument between Sheldon and Howard in An Introduction to Engineering and a Glob of Hair Gel reveals that Sheldon never takes off his Nobel Prize so people will ask him about it.

    Career Highlights

    Dr. Sheldon Cooper is a former senior theoretical particle physicist at the California Institute of Technology, focusing on string theory and its alter ego M-theory. He held this position for three-and-a-half years at the outset of the show and up until the eighth season. As he was being paid under a grant to specifically research string theory, he is then promoted to junior professor in order to change his field of study to dark matter, with the stipulation that he'd teach a graduate-level class on analytical mechanics. He returns to string theory research in the eleventh season. Previously, he was a visiting professor at the Heidelberg Institute in Germany at age fifteen and examined perturbative amplitudes in N=4 supersymmetric theories leading to a re-examination of the ultraviolet properties of multiloop N=8 supergravity using modern twistor theory at age sixteen. His doodle of a hyperelliptic Riemann surface was the basis of his postdoctoral fellowship. He believes string theory better unites quantum mechanics with general relativity than does loop quantum gravity. He neither gives credence to the notion that quantized space-time will manifest itself as minute differences in the speed of light for different colors (as he expects matter consists of tiny strings) nor that only loop quantum gravity calculates the entropy of black holes. Nonetheless, he is solely responsible for the university's six-loop quantum gravity calculations. Sheldon's work on string theory is concentrated in several different directions. Notably, Sheldon has refocused his research from bosonic string theory to heterotic string theory. He wrote a paper on the decays of highly excited massive string states and illustrated mirror symmetry in the footnote of a publication. He determined that three-dimensional string-nets provided a unified picture of fermions and gauge bosons and reconciled the black hole information paradox with his theory of string-network condensates following a breakthrough in showing how neutrinos emerge from a string-net condensate. He also designated time for solving the space-time geometry in higher spin gravity and worked on time-dependent backgrounds in string theory, specifically quantum field theory in D-dimensional de Sitter space. Moreover, Dr. Cooper's research spans particle physics in particle cosmology and studies the interplay between particle physics and cosmology during the Physical cosmology of the Universe. With Rajesh Koothrappali, he explored the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model, Theories of Supersymmetry breaking, string theory implications of Gamma rays from weakly interacting massive particles as dark matter annihilations, and considered Dark matter detection methods of optimizing a particle detector for 500 giga-Gelectronvolt Weakly interacting massive particles to this end. At a San Francisco conference, he tried to initiate a collaboration with Nobel Prize-winning physicist George Smoot by presenting him his paper on astrophysical probes of M-theory effects in the Chronology of the early universe. The famous physicist Stephen Hawking reached out to him during a lecture stay at Caltech after Sheldon's brilliant mind was revealed in a reading of his fascinating, though wrong, paper which posited that the Higgs boson is a black hole Entropy accelerating backwards through time. Sheldon also maintained a correspondence with cosmological physicist Elizabeth Plimpton for years about their mutual interest in effects of a passing gravitational wave signatures of inflations in the Chronology of the early universe. When Caltech received a new open science grid computer, he attempted to schedule a time to run computer simulations of structure formation in the early universe. He was thinking about how one could use the fact that a rapidly rotating mirror turns virtual photons into real ones as a method of observing dark energy. However, he no longer preoccupies his time with investigating why the Zero-point energy and predicted mass of the quantum vacuum has little effect on the metric expansion of space. Sheldon has redirected his work to the nature of dark matter. In addition to studying the Weakly interacting massive particles as dark matter, a particle physics point of view, he also considered the scalar field dark matter, an observable large-scale structure of a geometric point of view. This led him to attempt a full mathematical proof of the Riemanni Penrose Conjecture. Bridging theory and experiment, Sheldon is active in the field of particle physics phenomenology at high-energy colliders such as the LHC. Sheldon came close to figuring out why the Large Hadron Collider had yet to isolate the Higgs boson particle. Though, he was refused clearance for a very prestigious government research fellowship at a secret military supercollider, located beneath a fake agricultural station 12.5 miles southeast of Traverse City, Michigan. In a similar capacity, Sheldon has made advances in theoretical plasma physics, studying turbulence and Turbulent diffusion, and how it might be reduced to improve fusion reactor designs. Consequently, Sheldon worked with colleague Barry Kripke on the Grant proposal for a new fusion reactor, as the university was only allowed to submit one proposal. From nuclear physics, he was thought to have discovered a method for synthetic element. Despite the fact that a Chinese research team at the Hubei Institute for Nuclear Physics ran a test on a cyclotron with extremely promising results and reportedly found the element, his calculations were wrong; the table from the Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, in which he looked up the nuclear reaction rate rates of chemical elements such as mendelevium, was in units of square centimeters (cm2), which he misread as square meters (m2), meaning he was off by a factor of 10,000. Sheldon surmised there must be some atomic particle and molecular resonance between the elements he did not consider. In fact, someone from the Chinese research team added simulated signals to the data files, as Leonard Hofstadter re-ran the tests in his lab and disproved Sheldon's theory. Sheldon additionally engages in condensed matter physics research on occasion and has lectured on topological insulators, as well as given a seminar on thermodynamic fluctuations. With Leonard, he co-wrote a paper titled "Paradoxical Moment-of-Inertia Changes Due to Putative Super-Solids", to be presented at an Institute for Experimental Physics topical conference on Bose-Einstein condensates. He discovered that electrons traveling through a graphene sheet on hexagonal pathways possess zero effective mass since they coincidentally exhibit the same dispersion pattern as Dirac fermions and must be considered as a Fermionic field wave. In addition, he had a minor epiphany regarding the polymer degradation phenomenon. From a philosophical perspective, Sheldon has grappled with Gedankenexperiments (i.e., "thought experiments") to illustrate the quantum measurement problem. He produced four out of the five Gedankenexperiments he thought necessary for a cogent restatement of the quantum measurement problem, before the information was lost. For his contributions to theoretical physics, he won a Caltech Chancellor's Award for Science. In "The Monopolar Expedition", Sheldon received a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to lead an expedition to the Magnetic North Pole in the Arctic Circle for a magnetic monopole experiment in search of slow-moving magnetic monopoles, with Leonard, Raj and Howard as his support team. In the experiment, he detected what he believed was a significant magnetic monopolar magnetic charge, validating string theory, one of the chief predictions of superstring theory. Though Sheldon publicly announced he had confirmed string theory and would receive a Nobel Prize, he learned that the charge detected was actually static electricity from the others' electric can opener, forcing Sheldon to issue a retraction to his announcement and severely damaging his reputation at the university. Soon after, National Public Radio with Ira Flatow from Science Friday interviewed him by phone from his office, regarding the recent so-called discovery of spin ice and magnetic monopoles in spin ice. Based on his supposed discovery of a new stable superheavy element (which was actually a blunder), Sheldon appeared on Science Friday twice wherein a possible Nobel Prize in Chemistry was mentioned, had an article written about him in Physics Today and the National Science Foundation (NSF) wanted to give him a substantial grant. Based upon a theory from Leonard, Sheldon wrote a paper detailing a theory that space-time is like a super-fluid. The paper was well received by the scientific community that included Professor Stephen Hawking. In "The Anxiety Optimization", Sheldon is trying to increase his working efficiency by keeping a high anxiety level while driving everybody crazy. The only good point is that he wants his friends to annoy him. Extremely tired, both Penny and Leonard put him to bed singing "Soft Kitty". Leonard gets an idea to compare the universe to the surface of an Nth dimension sphere which he describes to Sheldon, who finds the theory interesting. He works out the math. Together they are praised, lecture on their discovery and get an award. Howard comes up with the idea to turn it into a working guidance system which is patented, and Howard builds a working prototype by the end of season 9. In the 11th and 12th seasons, Sheldon and Amy work together on a Super-Asymmetry for string theory which is published and widely applauded. After a couple of Fermi-Lab scientists accidentally prove their theory, all of them are in competition for a possible Nobel Prize. In "The VCR Illumination", after Sheldon finds the Russian paper that says the Super Asymmetry is not worth pursing, both he and Amy get very depressed. Sheldon locates an emergency VHS tape made by him when he was eleven (for, according to him, the day they stopped making Star Wars movies). His character from Young Sheldon tries to give him a pep talk but it was recorded over by his father with one of his football games. Amy keeps watching it and then finds his father's halftime pep talk which does help Sheldon. His father tells the team that they're not going to win this game, but that that does not make them losers. They can learn from failure as much as they can learn from success. Sheldon is encouraged and even thanks his dead father in the end. In 2019, both he and Amy accept the Nobel Prizes in Physics for the development of Super Asymmetry. At the ceremony, Sheldon puts aside his self-centered speech and realizes that his achievement isn't just his but also his family and friends who encouraged him and tolerated him. Sheldon introduces his friends to the world and tells them how much he loves them, even calling him his other family, in the last moments of the show.

    Aside from his characteristic idiosyncrasies, and unpragmatic obsessions Sheldon believes humans are illogical and attempts to be logical himself. [Even though, in reality, he's actually significantly more illogical than most people in so many ways (i.e.; fear of change, fear of birds, using his smarts to make others feel dumb, being immature etc.)] He frequently states that he possesses an eidetic memory although the correct term for this type of recall is hyperthymesia (highly superior autobiographical memory) He also states that he has an IQ of 187, though he claims his IQ cannot be accurately measured by normal tests (further confirming his egotism). Sheldon has a generally excessively extensive knowledge of most philosophical principles of certain topics of interest, as shown, for example, by his comments about various details of anecdotal knowledge (for instance, about the introduction of the fork into Thailand). He can remember everything he's exposed to. It was also revealed in "The Sales Call Sublimation" that Sheldon, possibly, has synesthesia. He told Raj that he automatically sees prime numbers as red and that twin primes appear pink and smell like gasoline. These are characteristics of people with synesthesia.

    Sheldon also has qualities associated with being a prodigy, such as an inflated ego, social ineptitude, and an inability to relate emotionally with other people. Despite his intelligence, he has a distinct lack of emotional maturity and is often baffled by even the most common social interactions. He not only fails to understand the simplest sarcastic jokes made by his friends but also regards their sadness over problems with blatant confusion.

    Eventually he has begun to understand the concept of sarcasm, attempting unsuccessfully to employ it himself towards Penny in the second season, and successfully employing it towards his other friends in the third season. He appears to have a complete disinterest in romantic relationships, and his eccentricities, direct remarks and demanding nature put him at odds with his own friends and especially Penny. For a few years he also showed a disinterest in being romantic with Amy.

    Up until "The Empathy Optimization", Sheldon never seemed to have any sense of remorse or guilt. Perfect examples of this include when he ratted out Leonard, Raj and Howard for inappropriate sexual behavior to Human Resources, just because he thought he did nothing wrong (when, in reality, he talked to his assistant about sexually transmitted diseases) and when he puts down Amy by not treating her accomplishments like they were a big deal.

    According to Sheldon's Meemaw, it's strongly implied that Sheldon takes after his grandfather, Pop-pop, who was known for being "a stubborn, egotistical man". When the group find an actual prop of the One Ring from The Lord of the Rings Sheldon immediately snatches it off Howard, bluntly declaring "Mine!" and when people protest to this, he claims "I don't understand why, in this group, I never get my way!", completely oblivious to the fact that he always gets his way. When he doesn't get the Ring, he constantly tries to retrieve it, to the point of invading his own friends' privacy and boundaries and effectively stealing it off them (e.g.; he tried to steal it off Penny while she was sleeping, only resulting in her reflexively punching him and breaking his nose and later pickpocketing Leonard while he was relieving himself in the men's room). This particular example shows that his great love for a fictional movie or rights cause him to be extremely obsessed with things that don't really matter in the context of the real world. In conclusion, it can be axiomatically ascertained that Sheldon will try to achieve, retrieve or maintain anything if it meant that he would seem (fictionally or genuinely) superior to "everyone" else.

    Sheldon adheres to The Roommate Agreement constantly when things don't go his way and interestingly, Sheldon's styled the roommate agreement so that everything goes his way. Sheldon also officiates in said agreement that he settles all ties, increasing the likelihood that he gets what he wants. That being said, when a clause of the Roommate Agreement applies to him to not do something, he will treat it like it's ridiculous - in the process, hypocritically violating the agreement despite constantly chiding Leonard when he apparently violates it. At one point, when Leonard headed a project for the group, Sheldon labelled him as simply the founder, while he was chief or head of absolutely everything else, making him in charge. He also tried to make the project named after himself, even trying to get by naming the project with his name spelt backwards. Sheldon is revealed by Priya to have repeatedly violated the roommate agreement, and the several demonstrations of this cause deep discomfort and even despair in Sheldon, who becomes vengeful and deliberately damages Leonard and Priya's relationship through blackmail afterwards.

    Due to his eccentric behavior and arrogance, Sheldon isn't well-liked by many people. Due to his belief that he's intellectually "superior", he's not ashamed to insult his own friends, like Leonard, whose work Sheldon deems derivative and who never appreciated his overbearing mother; Howard, who's merely an engineer and not a real scientist, and also doesn't possess a doctorate (despite the fact that engineering has more practical real-world applications, as well as more related jobs, than theoretical physics does, a fact that Sheldon doesn't take into account); and Penny, who Sheldon considers (and in some ways, is) the polar opposite of an intellectual. He often mocks her for having once dropped out of a community college. In "The Thespian Catalyst", Sheldon makes a speech to a class of bored and disinterested grad students, reminding them that they will never be as smart as he is. Teaching is something else that Sheldon fails at having no social skills.

    Sheldon's obsession with routine constantly causes friction with him and his friends. In "The Dumpling Paradox", he has an issue with Penny sleeping on the couch, because he wants to watch Doctor Who and Penny is sleeping in his spot. Leonard offers some alternatives, but Sheldon refuses to accept them, because they're not part of his routine. In the same episode, he states that he, Leonard, and Raj can't order Chinese food without Howard. "Basic math simply won't allow it", as Sheldon puts it. Sheldon's routine is even written for everyone to view, except for 2:45 to 3:05 in the afternoons, where he spends some recreational time in a storage room in the Caltech basement. Even his recreational time is planned and he spends it doing the same thing—playing keepie uppie with a hacky sack.

    Sheldon's also been shown to have issues with closure. An example of this is when he has a near meltdown when he learned that one of his favorite sci-fi shows, Alphas, had been cancelled after a cliffhanger. Amy tries to break him out of it using several exercises. Sheldon seems to overcome his closure issues, but after Amy leaves, he finishes all the exercises.

    Also, due to his lack of emotion and his inability to understand sarcasm, Sheldon never seems to realize when he's in trouble. When other people get mad at him, he blames them (their inability to "properly" understand the situation or the fact that they can't control their emotions). In "The Einstein Approximation", Sheldon tries to get a menial job. The woman at the employment office doesn't understand his behavior, and when he tells her he works as a physicist at Caltech, she thinks he's crazy and calls security. Sheldon isn't fazed by this, because in his mind, he's done nothing wrong, and he casually waits for her to return so they can finish.

    Sheldon also possesses many childlike qualities. For example, though unaware of it, he's extremely stubborn. Examples of this include naming the The Physics Bowl Quiz for Caltech, deciding to go to San Francisco by train instead of flying (due to his love of trains), his needing of his mother (or Penny) to care for him when he is sick, which involves singing "Soft Kitty", having his Homemade Soup made for him, and rubbing Vicks VapoRub on his chest. He cannot stand to be interrupted, concede when he doesn't know something, or hear people bicker or argue, which results in him crinkling his lips with intense frustration when any of these events occur. Sheldon hasn't attempted to obtain a driver's license (though he does possess a learner's permit) and needs his friends to drive him everywhere; he refuses to take the bus. He attempts to learn to drive on a simulator, but fails instantly. Sheldon's excuse for this is that he is "too evolved" to perform "plebeian tasks" such as driving. Amy eventually teaches him to drive which he does returning from the desert with Howard. He drives so fast that the police stops him and he just gives his license to the policeman permanently.

    In Season 5's "The Pulled Groin Extrapolation", Amy asked Leonard to attend a wedding with her. Leonard asked why she did not ask Sheldon to go instead. Amy answered that Sheldon behaved like a child the last time so he is out. After Amy left, Sheldon said in a sing-song tone to Leonard; "Ha-ha, you have to go to a wedding!" as he was unwrapping his newly bought toy train set, further emphasizing his childlike qualities (also revealing he didn't want to go anyway).

    He has also shown some slightly childish fear. In the Season 2 Episode, "The Euclid Alternative", Sheldon mutters something that shows that he has a night-light ("Maybe I could keep my sheets if I turn out the night-light").

    However most of these problems can be traced back to his root personality fault of stubbornness.

    Like his friends, he is scientifically inclined, and is fond of Comic Books, costumes, video games, flags and science fiction, specifically Battlestar Galactica, Doctor Who, the Stargate series, Star Trek, Star Wars, and Firefly, although he strongly dislikes Babylon 5 because he thinks it "lacks scientific integrity" and is "derivative". He has claimed to be an honorary graduate of Starfleet Academy, and is an avid fan of Science Officer Spock. Other favorite characters of his are Batman, Spider-Man, The Hulk, The Flash, Superman, and Frodo Baggins.

    He likes playing Halo every Wednesday and paintball on the weekend with his friends. He can also play the piano and theremin, and seems to be a very good Tuvan throat singer, but would be better if not for a part in the Roommate Agreement denying him practice.

    Sheldon is a tall, lean, yet well-built man, originally in his late twenties, but he's in his late thirties by series end. He is 6' 1" (1.85 m) with brown hair and blue eyes. His wardrobe consists of vintage T-shirts (which he always wears over a long-sleeve shirt) adorned with references to superheroes, quantum physics, Sci-Fi television shows, and robots. Sheldon often expresses his mood through his choice of attire; especially his t-shirts. He's got a collection SO large in fact, that it has its own page on the Wiki under Sheldon's Wardrobe. He also owns a dark blue plaid suit which he wears for lecturing and other formal occasions. Later he had a less loud suit.

    He also appears to enjoy Reddit, as he has been seen with a Snoo (the Reddit mascot) shirt. He usually wears a long sleeve shirt underneath it along with plaid pants. Sheldon is tall and thin (setting him apart from his shorter colleagues), with Penny, and later Leonard, saying he looks like a giant praying mantis.

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  2. Sheldon Lee Cooper, Ph.D., Sc.D., is a fictional character in the CBS television series The Big Bang Theory and its spinoff series Young Sheldon, portrayed by actors Jim Parsons and Iain Armitage respectively (with Parsons as the latter series' narrator).

  3. Em Young Sheldon, spin-off de The Big Bang Theory, a trama acompanha o jovem Sheldon Cooper (Iain Armitage), de 9 anos, quando ele pula quatro séries para começar o ensino médio junto com seu...

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  4. Follow the childhood of Sheldon Cooper, a child genius and the main character of The Big Bang Theory, and his family and friends in 1989 Texas. Watch episodes, trailers, cast, reviews, trivia, and more on IMDb, the world's most popular and authoritative source for movie, TV and celebrity content.

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  5. Saiba tudo sobre a 7ª temporada de Jovem Sheldon, que pode ser a conclusão da série, seguindo a cronologia de The Big Bang Theory. Veja também o elenco, a sinopse e a data de lançamento da série que mostra a infância de Sheldon Cooper.

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