corner
corner

Phys. Rev. E 51, 2909–2918 (1995)

Emergent traffic jams

Download: PDF (714 kB) Buy this article Export: BibTeX or EndNote (RIS)

Kai Nagel and Maya Paczuski
Department of Physics, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, New York 11973
Center for Parallel Computing ZPR, University of Cologne, 50923 Köln, Germany

Received 20 October 1994; published in the issue dated April 1995

We study a single-lane traffic model that is based on human driving behavior. The outflow from a traffic jam self-organizes to a critical state of maximum throughput. Small perturbations of the outflow far downstream create emergent traffic jams with a power law distribution P(t)∼t-3/2 of lifetimes t. On varying the vehicle density in a closed system, this critical state separates lamellar and jammed regimes and exhibits 1/f noise in the power spectrum. Using random walk arguments, in conjunction with a cascade equation, we develop a phenomenological theory that predicts the critical exponents for this transition and explains the self-organizing behavior. These predictions are consistent with all of our numerical results.

© 1995 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevE.51.2909
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevE.51.2909
PACS:
05.40.+j, 89.40.+k, 05.60.+w