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Characteristics of Transitions in Freeway Traffic By Manasa Rayabhari Soyoung Ahn.

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Presentation on theme: "Characteristics of Transitions in Freeway Traffic By Manasa Rayabhari Soyoung Ahn."— Presentation transcript:

1 Characteristics of Transitions in Freeway Traffic By Manasa Rayabhari Soyoung Ahn

2 Outline: Dynamic Transition  Introduction  Objectives  Literature Review  Sites and data  Database development  Preliminary analysis  Summary of findings  Future work and time-frame

3 Introduction Significance and Priorities  U.S. DOT’s mobility strategic plan - Congestion and bottlenecks have negative impact on the quality of life in terms of air quality, energy consumption and our economy.  Wasted time and fuel resulting from congestion are equivalent to $68 billion a year.  This research will provide a valuable insight on how congested traffic behaves under various transitions that frequently occur on urban freeways.  Understanding of the transition properties will expand the current knowledge on traffic congestion and serve as a building block for future traffic modeling and management practice as well as other outputs such as delay & travel time.

4 Objectives  Understanding different types of transitions that freeway traffic undergoes at different queue locations. The Tail of a Queue :  Studying the relationship between the characteristics of transition and traffic variables such as initial flow (or speed) and changes in flow upon a regime change. The Head of a Queue :  Properties of regime transition at as vehicles discharge from an active bottleneck.  Quantifying characteristics such as the length of transition, discharge rate, free-flow speed, etc from congested to freely flowing regimes. Inhomogeneous Section :  Analyzing the transitions near freeway ramps, lane-reduction and/or grade change.  Quantifying features such as the length and their relationship with traffic variables (e.g. change in flow, congestion level, etc.) on an individual lane basis.

5 Literature Review 1.Kinematic wave model by Lighthill-Whitham (1955) and Richards (1956) (LWR) model and its simplified version by Newell (1993). »Key traffic evolutions at a macroscopic level 2. Cassidy (1998) »Identification of periods of stationary traffic »congested flow-occupancy relationship using the aggregated data over the stationary periods. 3. Muñoz and Daganzo (2003) »“Transition zones” emerge when a queue forms at a bottleneck. »Propagates as a “shock” upstream and then dissipates with decreasing demand

6 Proposed Research  Dynamic Transition  What we have done so far  Transition near the tail-end of a queue while expanding and receding  Static Transition  Transition near the head of a queue (i.e. near an active bottleneck)  Transition near inhomogeneous section »Ramps »Lane reduction or expansion

7 Sites and Data

8 Site 1: Queen Elizabeth Way (QEW)  Canadian freeway, “Queen Elizabeth Way” Schematic of QEW

9 Site 2: M4  British expressway M4 Schematic of M4 Travel Direction

10 Site Characteristics QEWM4 No of lanes33 and then 2 No of loop stations1613 Length10.05 KM6.8 KM Bottleneck typeMergeLane-drop Congestion Time6:00 – 10:00 AM6:00 – 9:00 AM No of ramps5 on-ramps 3 off-ramps None

11 Data QEWM4 Data type20-sec loop dataEvent data aggregated to 20 seconds Dates09/13/1999 – 09/24/1999 (weekdays) 11/1/1998 – 12/05/1998 (weekdays) AM and/or PM peakAM Peak

12 Speed Contour: QEW QUEUE FORMATION 6:12:00 AM – 6:35:00 AM QUEUE DISSIPATION 9:49:00 AM – 9:56:40 AM

13 Speed Contour: M4

14 Database Development

15 Variables Included  Dependent variable: Transition duration  Potential explanatory variables  Speed or flow change  Speed or flow before transition  Wave speed  Presence of on-ramp or off-ramp (QEW only)  Lane number  Distance from the bottleneck  Weather

16 Measurement of Variables  Transition duration: speed curves Transition Start Time (t 1 ) Transition End Time (t 2 ) Transition from Free Flow State to Congested State Transition Duration (t 2 – t 1 )

17 Measurement of Variables  Speed : S b and S a are the average speeds before and after transitions respectively  Change in Speed : S b ~ S a Onset Regime Clear Regime S b = Average (s i ) i jS a = Average (s j )i S b = Average (s i ) S a = Average (s j ) j

18 Measurement of Variables  Flow and change in flow: Oblique cumulative count curves Q b = Average (q i ) Q a = Average (q j ) Change in flow = Q b ~ Q a

19 Measurement of Variables  Wave speed  The wave speed is obtained using the following formula:  Wave speed = Distance traveled by the queue --- (1) Time Duration = Distance between detector stations --- (2) Time Duration Distance from BN Time Duration 1 1 2 3 4 5 (1) (2)

20 Measurement of Variables  Presence of on-ramp or off-ramp Presence of Off -ramp Presence of On-ramp

21 Measurement of Variables  Distance from bottleneck  For M4 : The bottleneck is assumed to be at the merge i.e., at the 2 nd station.  For QEW: There are 2 bottlenecks during queue formation at this site. - One bottleneck is situated in between stations 47 and 48. - The bottleneck is between the stations 51 and 52.  Distance from bottleneck is thus obtained for each station.

22 Measurement of Variables  Weather  Weather data for the study days was obtained from the following website. http://www.wunderground.com  It was found that the weather was quite consistent in all the study days.  There was no precipitation on the analyzed days and temperatures were above freezing.

23 Example Database

24 Analysis

25 Analysis Process 1.Transitions Duration (for each site)  Duration vs. Distance from Bottleneck  Duration vs. Distance from Bottleneck (average, standard error for each location)  Duration Vs Ramp type (QEW)  Durations Vs Average Wave-speed of queues 2. Lane – Specific Behavior of transition (for each site)  Arrival times of queues in each lane  Duration of transition in each lane

26 1. Transition Duration - Distance from BN  Queue Formation : As the queue propagates backward from the bottle-neck, the transition duration increases.  Queue Dissipation : As the queue propagates forward towards the bottle-neck, the transition duration increases.  Presence of On-ramp/ Off ramp affects the transition duration.

27 Transition Duration: QEW (Onset, BN : 47) - sudden reduction in transition duration - quicker transition from free flow - congestion

28 Transition Duration: QEW (Onset, BN : 51) - sudden reduction in transition duration - quicker transition from free flow - congestion

29 Transition Duration: QEW (Clear) - sudden reduction in transition duration - quicker transition from congestion – free flow

30 Transition Duration: M4 (Onset)

31 Transition Duration: M4 (Clear)

32 2. Transition Duration Vs Dist BN (QEW) - Average and Std. Error Values

33 Transition Duration Vs Dist BN (M4) - Average and Std. Error Values

34 3. Transition Duration – Ramp Condition Queue Formation: Backward Propagation  On-ramp adds more traffic to the queue thus accelerating the transition from free flow to congested flow. This decreases the transition duration.  Off-ramp reduces the traffic on the freeway thus decelerating the transition from free flow to congested flow. This increases the transition duration. Queue Dissipation: Forward Propagation  On-ramp adds more traffic to the queue thus decelerating the transition from congested flow to free flow. This increases the transition duration.  Off-ramp reduces the traffic on the freeway thus accelerating the transition from congested flow to free flow. This decreases the transition duration.

35 Transition Duration vs. Ramp condition On- RampOff - Ramp OnsetDecreasesIncreases ClearIncreasesDecreases Change in Transition Duration with On Ramp and Off Ramp

36 4. Transition Duration vs. Wave speed for each queue  The Average Wave speed of each queue is calculated using the total queue formation/queue dissipation time. Avg. Wave Speed : Total Distance traveled from St 8 to St 1 Total time for queue formation/dissipation  Wave Speed was found to be inversely related to Transition Duration

37 Transition Duration vs. Wave speed : M4

38 Transition Duration vs. Wave speed : QEW  Noise in the data due to the presence of On and Off Ramps

39 5. Lane-wise Arrival Time (M4 onset)  On most of the study days, queuing started in Lane 2 first, then Lane 1 and finally Lane 3.

40 Lane-wise Arrival Time (M4 clear)  On most of the study days, clearing started in Lane 2 first, then Lane 1 and finally Lane 3.

41 Lane-wise Arrival Time (QEW onset, BN at 47)  On most of the study days, queuing started in Lane 2 first, then Lane 1 and finally Lane 3.

42 Lane-wise Arrival Time (QEW onset, BN at 51)  On most of the study days, queuing started in Lane 2 first, then Lane 1 and finally Lane 3.

43 Problems/Issues with the Database  Noisy QEW Data : QEW database was found to be very noisy and the transitions were not clear.  Difficulty in identifying clearing queue: QEW database has 20 second loop data starting from 6 AM to 10 AM. But, on few days, the final clearing occurred after 10 AM.  Data Precision: 20 second data was not precise enough for transition identification. Using 1 second data will increase the accuracy.  Correlations: Most of the variables were found to be highly correlated making Statistical Modeling difficult.  For developing linear models for transition duration, larger database is required.

44 Summary of Findings  Change in Duration with respect to the following variables VariableOnsetClear Distance from BN IncreasesDecreases On-RampDecreasesIncreases Off-RampIncreasesDecreases Wave SpeedDecreases

45 On-going Analysis  Head of the queue:  The head of a queue will be analyzed using the trajectory data available for U.S. Highway 101 in Los Angeles, CA.  Microscopic level: Evolution of speed-spacing relations for individual vehicles in the vicinity of the active bottleneck.  Macroscopic level : Examining the flow-density relations in an attempt to bridge the micro- and macro-level features.  Inhomogeneous sections:  Trajectory data from I-80E near San Francisco and U.S. Highway 101 in Los Angeles, CA will be included in the analyses.  Distance over which a transition occurs due to a merge, a diverge or a lane-reduction is analyzed.  Freeway stretch near an inhomogeneous point will be divided into multiple contiguous segments, and a flow-density relation will be estimated for each segment.


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