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Transportation Engineering I TTE 4004 Summer 2010.

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Presentation on theme: "Transportation Engineering I TTE 4004 Summer 2010."— Presentation transcript:

1 Transportation Engineering I TTE 4004 Summer 2010

2 Instructor: Dr. Pei-Sung Lin, P.E., PTOE Program Director, ITS, Traffic Operations & Safety, Center for Urban Transportation Research (CUTR), University of South Florida Ph.D. from the University of Florida, and M.S. from the University of Texas at Austin Chair of the Intelligent Traffic Signal Operations Committee at the Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE) 20 years of research, governmental and consulting experience Contact Information: Office: CUT 125, TEL: (813) 974-4910, Fax: (813) 974-5168 Email: lin@cutr.usf.edu

3 Self Introduction (One minute) Your name Your major and department Why you take this class What you would like to learn from the class Your future career plan

4 Syllabus & Introduction and Background

5 Syllabus

6 Class format Objectives Quizzes and exams Grading policy Term project report Term project presentation Class attendance Blackboard Class schedule

7 Transportation Engineering I Introduction and background Vehicle motions and human factors Geometric design Earth work Capacity, level of service, intersection design Basic knowledge of traffic signal control Queuing theory Parking Basic knowledge of transportation planning Basic knowledge of transportation statistics Basic knowledge of transportation economics Basic knowledge of transportation safety Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS)

8 Introduction and Background Lecture 1(5/18/10)

9 Transportation Systems Definition and Scope –A transportation system may be defined as consisting of the fixed facilities, the flow entities, and the control system that permit people and goods to overcome the friction of geographical space efficiently in order to participate in timely manner in some desired activity.

10 Transportation Systems Fixed Facilities: –The physical components Links (e.g., roadway segments, railroad track, and pipes) Nodes (e.g., intersections, interchanges, transit terminals and airport) Flow Entities: –The units that traverse the fixed facilities Vehicles, container units, railroad cars and so on Control System: –Vehicular control and flow control Vehicular control: manual (drivers) or automatic (machine) Flow control: various types of signing, marking, and signal system, and the underlying rules of operations

11 Transportation Systems Transportation Demand: –Fulfill certain needs, such as going to school, to work, to shop, or to visit with friends –Meet the requirement of work schedule, activity schedule or travel plans Quantification versus Valuation: –Quantify the transportation proposals using the best available models, techniques, and/or tools –Evaluate the quantified results based on value systems

12 Transportation System Classification Classification Schemes: –Land transportation (a. Highway and b. Rail) –Air transportation (a. Domestic and b. International) –Water transportation (a. Inland, b. Coastal and c. Ocean) –Pipelines transportation (a. Oil, b. Gas and c, Other) Private and Public Transportation: –Private transportation –Public transportation Contract carriers – under individual contract (e.g., taxis, car rentals, and certain individually arranged services) Common carriers – generally scheduled services (e.g., transit bus, mass transportation or mass transit)

13 Governmental Participation: –Consisting of the rules of conduct, the collective decision-making processes, and the means of enforcing the rules that attempt to impact social and economic order and to maintain the cohesiveness of a society –The U.S. governmental structure places a high value on individual freedom and civil rights Instruments of Governmental Involvement: –Promotion, Regulation and Investment Arguments for and Against Government Intervention The role of Government

14 Background: –Basic tools necessary for work in the filed of engineering –More concerned with application of scientific knowledge Mathematical Models: –A model may be defined as the representation of a part of reality –A mathematical model employs one or more equations to represent a system and its behavior Components of Mathematical Models –Model postulation, model calibration, and model validation Transportation Models: –Models of physical systems, human factor models, and travel behavior models Tools and Applications

15 Questions?


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