Causes
Traffic bottlenecks are caused by a wide variety of things: * Construction zones where one or more existing lanes become unavailable (as depicted in the diagram on the right) * Accident sites that temporarily close lanes * Narrowing a low-capacity highway road * Terrain (e.g., uphill sections, very sharp curves) * Poorly timedGraphical and theoretical representation
Stationary bottleneck
Consider a stretch of highway with two lanes in one direction. Suppose that the fundamental diagram is modeled as shown here. The highway has a peak capacity of Q vehicles per hour, corresponding to a density of ''kc'' vehicles per mile. The highway normally becomes jammed at ''kj'' vehicles per mile. Before capacity is reached, traffic may flow at ''A'' vehicles per hour, or a higher ''B'' vehicles per hour. In either case, the speed of vehicles is ''vf'' (or "free flow"), because the roadway is under capacity. Now, suppose that at a certain location ''x0'', the highway narrows to one lane. The maximum capacity is now limited to ''D''’, or half of ''Q'', since only one lane of the two is available. State ''D'' shares the same flow rate as state ''D, but its vehicular density is higher. Using a time-space diagram, we may model the bottleneck event. Suppose that at time ''t0'', traffic begins to flow at rate ''B'' and speed ''vf''. After time ''t1'', vehicles arrive at the lighter flowrate ''A''. Before the first vehicles reach location ''x0'', the traffic flow is unimpeded. However, downstream of ''x0'', the roadway narrows, reducing the capacity by half—and to below that of state ''B''. Due to this, vehicles will begin queuing upstream of ''x0''. This is represented by high-density state ''D''. The vehicle speed in this state is the slower ''vd'', as taken from the fundamental diagram. Downstream of the bottleneck, vehicles transition to state ''D, where they again travel at free-flow speed ''vf''. Once vehicles arrive at rate ''A'' starting at time ''t1'', the queue will begin to clear and eventually dissipate. State ''A'' has a flowrate below the one-lane capacity of states ''D'' and ''D. On the time-space diagram, a sample vehicle trajectory is represented with a dotted arrow line. The diagram can readily represent vehicular delay and queue length. It is a simple matter of taking horizontal and vertical measurements within the region of state ''D''.Dynamic bottleneck
For this example, consider three lanes of traffic in one direction. Assume that a truck starts traveling at speed ''v'', more slowly than at the free-flow speed ''vf''. As shown on the fundamental diagram below, speed ''qu'' represents the reduced capacity (two-thirds of ''Q'', i.e., 2 out of 3 lanes available) around the truck. State ''A'' represents normal approaching traffic flow, again at speed ''vf''. State ''U'', with flowrate ''qu'', corresponds to the queuing upstream of the truck. On the fundamental diagram, vehicle speed ''vu'' is slower than speed ''vf''. But once drivers have navigated around the truck, they can again speed up and transition to downstream state ''D''. While this state travels at free flow, the vehicle density is less because fewer vehicles get around the bottleneck. Suppose that, at time ''t'', the truck slows from the free-flow rate to ''v''. A queue builds behind the truck, represented by state ''U''. Within the region of state ''U'', vehicles more slowly, as indicated by the sample trajectory. Because state ''U'' limits to a smaller flow than state ''A'', the queue will back up behind the truck and eventually crowd out the entire highway (slope ''s'' is negative). If state ''U'' had the higher flow, there would still be a growing queue. However, it would not back up because the slope ''s'' would be positive.Daganzo, Robert, ed. (1997). ''Fundamentals of Transportation and Transportation Operations''. Pergamon-Elsevier, Oxford, UKSee also
* Choke point *References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Traffic Bottleneck Road transport Road traffic management