TY - JOUR
T1 - Stability of multi-population traffic flows
AU - Hayat, Amaury
AU - Piccoli, Benedetto
AU - Xiang, Shengquan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, licensee AIMS Press.
PY - 2023/1/1
Y1 - 2023/1/1
N2 - Traffic waves, known also as stop-and-go waves or phantom jams, appear naturally as traffic instabilities, also in confined environments as a ring-road. A multi-population traffic is studied on a ring-road, comprised of drivers with stable and unstable behavior. There exists a critical penetration rate of stable vehicles above which the system is stable, and under which the system is unstable. In the latter case, stop-and-go waves appear, provided enough cars are on the road. The critical penetration rate is explicitly computable, and, in reasonable situations, a small minority of aggressive drivers is enough to destabilize an otherwise very stable flow. This is a source of instability that a single population model would not be able to explain. Also, the multi-population system can be stable below the critical penetration rate if the number of cars is sufficiently small. Instability emerges as the number of cars increases, even if the traffic density remains the same (i.e., number of cars and road size increase similarly). This shows that small experiments could lead to deducing imprecise stability conditions.
AB - Traffic waves, known also as stop-and-go waves or phantom jams, appear naturally as traffic instabilities, also in confined environments as a ring-road. A multi-population traffic is studied on a ring-road, comprised of drivers with stable and unstable behavior. There exists a critical penetration rate of stable vehicles above which the system is stable, and under which the system is unstable. In the latter case, stop-and-go waves appear, provided enough cars are on the road. The critical penetration rate is explicitly computable, and, in reasonable situations, a small minority of aggressive drivers is enough to destabilize an otherwise very stable flow. This is a source of instability that a single population model would not be able to explain. Also, the multi-population system can be stable below the critical penetration rate if the number of cars is sufficiently small. Instability emerges as the number of cars increases, even if the traffic density remains the same (i.e., number of cars and road size increase similarly). This shows that small experiments could lead to deducing imprecise stability conditions.
KW - control
KW - multi-population
KW - stability
KW - stop-and-go
KW - traffic flow
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85152226943
U2 - 10.3934/nhm.2023038
DO - 10.3934/nhm.2023038
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85152226943
SN - 1556-1801
VL - 18
SP - 877
EP - 905
JO - Networks and Heterogeneous Media
JF - Networks and Heterogeneous Media
IS - 2
ER -