Complexity of spatiotemporal traffic phenomena in flow of identical drivers: Explanation based on fundamental hypothesis of three-phase theory
- 23 March 2012
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review E
- Vol. 85 (3), 036110
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physreve.85.036110
Abstract
Based on numerical simulations of a stochastic three-phase traffic flow model, we reveal the physics of the fundamental hypothesis of three-phase theory that, in contrast with a fundamental diagram of classical traffic flow theories, postulates the existence of a two-dimensional (2D) region of steady states of synchronized flow where a driver makes an arbitrary choice of a space gap (time headway) to the preceding vehicle. We find that macroscopic and microscopic spatiotemporal effects of the entire complexity of traffic congestion observed up to now in real measured traffic data can be explained by simulations of traffic flow consisting of identical drivers and vehicles, if a microscopic model used in these simulations incorporates the fundamental hypothesis of three-phase theory. It is shown that the driver's choice of space gaps within the 2D region of synchronized flow associated with the fundamental hypothesis of three-phase theory can qualitatively change types of congested patterns that can emerge at a highway bottleneck. In particular, if drivers choose long enough spaces gaps associated with the fundamental hypothesis, then general patterns, which consist of synchronized flow and wide moving jams, do not emerge independent of the flow rates and bottleneck characteristics: Even at a heavy bottleneck leading to a very low speed within congested patterns, only synchronized flow patterns occur in which no wide moving jams emerge spontaneously. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.85.036110 ©2012 American Physical SocietyKeywords
This publication has 62 references indexed in Scilit:
- Probabilistic description of traffic flowPhysics Reports, 2005
- Still Flowing: Approaches to Traffic Flow and Traffic Jam ModelingOperations Research, 2003
- The physics of traffic jamsReports on Progress in Physics, 2002
- Empirical macroscopic features of spatial-temporal traffic patterns at highway bottlenecksPhysical Review E, 2002
- Traffic and related self-driven many-particle systemsReviews of Modern Physics, 2001
- Statistical physics of vehicular traffic and some related systemsPhysics Reports, 2000
- The physics of trafficPhysics World, 1999
- Congested Traffic Flow: Observations and TheoryTransportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board, 1999
- Experimental Features of Self-Organization in Traffic FlowPhysical Review Letters, 1998
- Der Verkehrsfluß auf SchnellstraßenFachberichte Messen · Steuern · Regeln, 1979