Article ID: | iaor2004300 |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Volume: | 36A |
Issue: | 8 |
Start Page Number: | 683 |
End Page Number: | 697 |
Publication Date: | Oct 2002 |
Journal: | Transportation Research. Part A, Policy and Practice |
Authors: | Cassidy Michael J., Bertini Robert L. |
Keywords: | queues: applications |
Details of traffic evolution were studied upstream and downstream of a freeway bottleneck located near a busy on-ramp. It is shown that on certain days the bottleneck became active upon dissipation of a queue emanating from somewhere further downstream. On such occasions, the bottleneck occurred at a fixed location, approximately one kilometer downstream of the merge. Notably, even after the dissipation of a downstream queue, the discharge flows in the active bottleneck were nearly constant, since the cumulative counts never deviated much from a linear trend. The average bottleneck discharge flows were also reproducible from day to day. The diagnostic tools used in this study were curves of cumulative vehicle arrival number versus time and cumulative occupancy versus time constructed from data measured at neighbouring freeway loop detectors. Once suitably transformed, these cumulative curves provided the measurement resolution necessary to observe the transitions between freely flowing and queued conditions and to identify some important traffic features.