Abstract

Contrary to traditional thinking and driver intuition, here we show that there is no benefit to ground vehicles increasing their packing density at stoppages. By systematically controlling the packing density of vehicles queued at a traffic light on a Smart Road, drone footage revealed that the benefit of an initial increase in displacement for close-packed vehicles is completely offset by the lag time inherent to changing back into a ‘liquid phase’ when flow resumes. This lag is analogous to the thermodynamic concept of the latent heat of fusion, as the ‘temperature’ (kinetic energy) of the vehicles cannot increase until the traffic ‘melts’ into the liquid phase. These findings suggest that in situations where gridlock is not an issue, drivers should not decrease their spacing during stoppages in order to lessen the likelihood of collisions with no loss in flow efficiency. In contrast, motion capture experiments of a line of people walking from rest showed higher flow efficiency with increased packing densities, indicating that the importance of latent heat becomes trivial for slower moving systems.

Highlights

  • 22 November 2017S Farzad Ahmadi, Austin S Berrier, William M Doty, Pat G Greer, Mohammad Habibi, Hunter A Morgan, Josam H C Waterman, Nicole Abaid and Jonathan B Boreyko

  • Any driver knows the unspoken rule that vehicles should increase their packing density at stoppages such as red lights or traffic jams

  • It is not necessarily a given that inducing phase transitions at stoppages increases flow efficiency, as reverting back into the liquid phase when motion is resumed is analogous to the input of ‘latent heat,’ which produces significant lag

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Summary

22 November 2017

S Farzad Ahmadi, Austin S Berrier, William M Doty, Pat G Greer, Mohammad Habibi, Hunter A Morgan, Josam H C Waterman, Nicole Abaid and Jonathan B Boreyko.

Introduction
Car motion through a traffic light
Theoretical model
Pedestrians emptying a line
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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