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5.02 Traffic Flow

Traffic Flow studies the movement of vehicles and drivers, focusing on the relationships between flow, density, and velocity to aid in roadway planning and operations. It includes concepts like time-space diagrams, time mean speed, space mean speed, and headway, which help quantify traffic characteristics. The document also discusses microscopic and macroscopic models of traffic flow, emphasizing the differences in their approaches to simulating vehicle behavior and traffic streams.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
49 views6 pages

5.02 Traffic Flow

Traffic Flow studies the movement of vehicles and drivers, focusing on the relationships between flow, density, and velocity to aid in roadway planning and operations. It includes concepts like time-space diagrams, time mean speed, space mean speed, and headway, which help quantify traffic characteristics. The document also discusses microscopic and macroscopic models of traffic flow, emphasizing the differences in their approaches to simulating vehicle behavior and traffic streams.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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5.

2: Traffic Flow
Traffic Flow is the study of the movement of individual drivers and vehicles between two points and the interactions they make
with one another. Unfortunately, studying traffic flow is difficult because driver behavior cannot be predicted with one-hundred
percent certainty. Fortunately, drivers tend to behave within a reasonably consistent range; thus, traffic streams tend to have some
reasonable consistency and can be roughly represented mathematically. To better represent traffic flow, relationships have been
established between the three main characteristics: (1) flow, (2) density, and (3) velocity. These relationships help in planning,
design, and operations of roadway facilities.

Traffic flow theory


Time-Space Diagram
Traffic engineers represent the location of a specific vehicle at a certain time with a time-space diagram. This two-dimensional
diagram shows the trajectory of a vehicle through time as it moves from a specific origin to a specific destination. Multiple vehicles
can be represented on a diagram and, thus, certain characteristics, such as flow at a certain site for a certain time, can be
determined.
Road Space Requirements.png

Flow and density


Flow (q) = the rate at which vehicles pass a fixed point (vehicles per hour) ,
\[ t_{measured}=Average \text{ } measured \text{ } time \text{ } headway\)
\[q=\frac{3600 N}{t_{measured}}
Density (Concentration) (k) = number of vehicles (N) over a stretch of roadway (L) (in units of vehicles per kilometer)
N
k = (5.2.1)
L

where:
N = number of vehicles occupying a highway segment of length {\displaystyle L}
q = equivalent hourly flow
L = length of roadway

k = density

Time-space diagram showing trajectories of vehicles over time and space

Speed
Measuring speed of traffic is not as obvious as it may seem; we can average the measurement of the speeds of individual vehicles
over time or over space, and each produces slightly different results.

Time mean speed


Time mean speed ( t̄ ) = arithmetic mean of speeds of vehicles passing a point
N
1
v̄ t = ∑ vn (5.2.2)
N
n=1

Space mean speed


Space mean speed (v¯ ) is defined as the harmonic mean of speeds passing a point during a period of time. It also equals the average
s

speeds over a length of roadway.


\[\bar v_t=\dfrac{N}{\sum_{n=1}^N \frac{1}{v_n}}\)

Relating time and space mean speed


Note that the time mean speed is average speed past a point as distinct from space mean speed which is average speed along a
length.

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The two speeds are related as
2
σs
v̄ t = v̄ s + (5.2.3)
v̄ s

The time mean speed higher than the space mean speed, but the differences vary with the amount of variability within the speed of
vehices. At high speeds (free flow), differences are minor, whereas in congested times, they might differ a factor 2.

Headway
The following definitions give what is referred to as the brutto gap (Asela) (Italian for gross), in contrast to netto gaps (Italian for
net). Netto gaps give the distance or time between the rear bumper of a vehicle and the front bumper of the next.

Time headway
Time headway (h ) = difference between the time when the front of a vehicle arrives at a point on the highway and the time the
t

front of the next vehicle arrives at the same point (in seconds)
Average Time Headway (h
¯
) = Average Travel Time per Unit Distance * Average Space Headway
t

¯ ¯
ht = t̄ ∗ hs (5.2.4)

Space headway
Space headway (h ) = difference in position between the front of a vehicle and the front of the next vehicle (in meters)
s

Average Space Headway (h


¯
)= Space Mean Speed * Average Time Headway
s

¯ ¯
hs = v̄ s ∗ ht (5.2.5)

Note that density and space headway are related:


\[k=\frac{1}{\bar{h_s}\]

Fundamental Diagram of Traffic Flow


The variables of flow, density, and space mean speed are related definitionally as:

q = kv̄ s (5.2.6)

Traditional Model (Parabolic)


Properties of the traditional fundamental diagram.
When density on the highway is zero, the flow is also zero because there are no vehicles on the highway
As density increases, flow increases
When the density reaches a maximum jam density (k ), flow must be zero because vehicles will line up end to end
j

Flow will also increase to a maximum value (q ), increases in density beyond that point result in reductions of flow.
m

Speed is space mean speed.


At density = 0, speed is freeflow (v ). The upper half of the flow curve is uncongested, the lower half is congested.
f

The slope of the flow density curve gives speed. Rise/Run = Flow/Density = Vehicles per hour/ Vehicles per km = km / hour

Traditional fundamental diagram of traffic

Observation (Triangular or Truncated Triangular)


Actual traffic data is often much noisier than idealized models suggest. However, what we tend to see is that as density rises, speed
is unchanged to a point (capacity) and then begins to drop if it is affected by downstream traffic (queue spillbacks). For a single
link, the relationship between flow and density is thus more triangular than parabolic. When we aggregate multiple links together
(e.g. a network), we see a more parabolic shape.

Flow varying by density on detector 688 (I-94 at 49th/53rd Avenue in Minneapolis) on November 1st 2000

5.2.2 https://eng.libretexts.org/@go/page/47334
Microscopic and Macroscopic Models
Models describing traffic flow can be classed into two categories: microscopic and macroscopic. Ideally, macroscopic models are
aggregates of the behavior seen in microscopic models.

Microscopic Models
Microscopic models predict the following behavior of cars (their change in speed and position) as a function of the behavior of the
leading vehicle.

Traffic phases in a the microscopic fundamental diagram (truncated triangular)

Macroscopic Models
Macroscopic traffic flow theory relates traffic flow, running speed, and density. Analogizing traffic to a stream, it has principally
been developed for limited access roadways (Leutzbach 1988). The fundamental relationship “q=kv” (flow (q) equals density (k)
multiplied by speed (v)) is illustrated by the fundamental diagram. Many empirical studies have quantified the component bivariate
relationships (q vs. v, q vs. k, k vs. v), refining parameter estimates and functional forms (Gerlough and Huber 1975, Pensaud and
Hurdle 1991; Ross 1991; Hall, Hurdle and Banks 1992; Banks 1992; Gilchrist and Hall 1992; Disbro and Frame 1992).
The most widely used model is the Greenshields model, which posited that the relationships between speed and density is linear.
These were most appropriate before the advent of high-powered computers enabled the use of microscopic models. Macroscopic
properties like flow and density are the product of individual (microscopic) decisions. Yet those microscopic decision-makers are
affected by the environment around them, i.e. the macroscopic properties of traffic.
While traffic flow theorists represent traffic as if it were a fluid, queueing analysis essentially treats traffic as a set of discrete
particles. These two representations are not-necessarily inconsistent. The figures to the right show the same 4 phases in the
fundamental diagram and the queueing input-output diagram. This is discussed in more detail in the next section.

Traffic phases in the queueing cumulative input-output (Newell) diagram

Examples
Example 1: Time-Mean and Space-Mean Speeds

Given five observed velocities (60 km/hr, 35 km/hr, 45 km/hr, 20 km/hr, and 50 km/hr), what is the time-mean speed and
space-mean speed?
Solution
Time-Mean Speed:
1
v̄ t = (60 + 35 + 45 + 20 + 50) = 42
5

Space-Mean Speed:
\(\bar v_s=\frac{N}{\sum_{n=1}^N\dfrac{1}{v_n}=\frac{5}{\dfrac{1}{60}+\dfrac{1}{35}+\dfrac{1}{45}+\dfrac{1}
{20}+\dfrac{1}{50}}=36.37\)
The time-mean speed is 42 km/hr and the space-mean speed is 36.37 km/hr.

Example 2: Computing Traffic Flow Characteristics

Given that 40 vehicles pass a given point in 1 minute and traverse a length of 1 kilometer, what is the flow, density, and time
headway?
Solution
Compute flow and density:
3600(40)
q = = 2400 veh/hr
60s

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40
k = = 40 veh/km
1

Find space-mean speed:


q = kv̄ s = 2400 = 40 v̄ s

v̄ s = 60km/hr

Compute space headway:


1
k = 40 =
¯
hs

¯
hs = 0.025km = 25m

Compute time headway:


¯ ¯ ¯
hs = v̄ s ∗ ht = 25 = (60 ∗ 1000/3600)ht

¯
ht = 1.5s

The time headway is 1.5 seconds.

EXAMPLE 3: The spot speeds (expressed in km/hr) observed at a road section are 66, 62, 45, 79, 32, 51,56,60,53 and 49. The
median speed (expressed in km/hr) is .
Solution: Median speed is the speed at the middle value in series of spot speeds that are arranged in ascending order. 50% of speed
values will be greater than the median 50% will be less than the median. Ascending order of spot speed studies are
32,39,45,51,53,56,60,62,66,79
Median speed = (53 +56 )/2=54.5 km/hr.

Thought Question
Problem
Microscopic traffic flow simulates the behaviors of individual vehicles while macroscopic traffic flow simulates the behaviors of
the traffic stream overall. Conceptually, it would seem that microscopic traffic flow would be more accurate, as it would be based
on driver behavior than simply flow characteristics. Assuming microscopic simulation could be calibrated to truly account for
driver behaviors, what is the primary drawback to simulating a large network?
Solution
Computer power. To simulate a very large network with microscopic simulation, the number of vehicles that needed to be assessed
is very large, requiring a lot of computer memory. Current computers have issues doing very large microscopic networks in a
timely fashion, but perhaps future advances will do away with this issue.

Sample Problem
Four vehicles are traveling at constant speeds between sections X and Y (280 meters apart) with their positions and speeds
observed at an instant in time. An observer at point X observes the four vehicles passing point X during a period of 15 seconds.
The speeds of the vehicles are measured as 88, 80, 90, and 72 km/hr respectively. Calculate the flow, density, time mean speed,
and space mean speed of the vehicles.

Answer
Flow
3600 3600
q = N( ) = 4( ) = 960 veh/hr
tmeasured 15

Density
\(k=\frac{N}{L}=\frac{4*1000}{280}=14.2 \text{ } veh/km
Time Mean Speed
1 N 1
v̄ t = ∑ vn = (72 + 90 + 80 + 88) = 82.5 km/hr
N n=1 4

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Space Mean Speed
\(\bar v_s=\frac{N}{\sum_{n=1}^N \frac{1}{v_i}}=\frac{4}{\frac{1}{72} \frac{1}{90} \frac{1}{80} \frac{1}
{88}}=81.86
ti = L/ vi

tA = L/ vA = 0.28/88 = 0.00318hr

tB = L/ vB = 0.28/80 = 0.00350hr

tC = L/ vC = 0.28/90 = 0.00311hr

tD = L/ vD = 0.28/72 = 0.00389hr

NL 4∗0.28
v̄ s = = = 81.87 km/hr
N
∑ in (0.00318+0.00350+0.00311+0.00389)
n= 1

Variables
dn = distance of nth vehicle
tn = travel time of nth vehicle
vn = speed (velocity) of nth vehicle
ht,nm = time headway between vehicles n and m
hs,nm = space (distance) headway between vehicles n and m
q = flow past a fixed point (vehicles per hour)

N = number of vehicles

tmeasured = time over which measurement takes place (number of seconds)


t = travel time

k = density (vehicles per km)

L = length of roadway section (km)

v = time mean speed


t

v = space mean speed


s

v = freeflow (uncongested speed)


f

k = jam density
j

qm = maximum flow

Key Terms
Time-space diagram
Flow, speed, density
Headway (space and time)
Space mean speed, time mean speed
Microscopic, Macroscopic

Supplementary Reading
Revised Monograph on Traffic Flow Theory

Videos

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Tra c Flow

This page titled 5.2: Traffic Flow is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by David Levinson et al.
(Wikipedia) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.

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