Cellular automata approach to three-phase traffic theory
Boris S. Kerner, Sergey L. Klenov, Dietrich E. Wolf

TL;DR
This paper extends cellular automata traffic models to incorporate a two-dimensional steady state region in the flow-density plane, aligning with three-phase traffic theory, and reproduces key congested patterns and phase transitions.
Contribution
It introduces a CA model with a synchronization distance that captures three-phase traffic behavior, improving realism over previous models.
Findings
Reproduces general and synchronized flow patterns
Shows dependence of congestion on flow rates near on-ramps
Analyzes capacity drops due to congested pattern formation
Abstract
The cellular automata (CA) approach to traffic modeling is extended to allow for spatially homogeneous steady state solutions that cover a two dimensional region in the flow-density plane. Hence these models fulfill a basic postulate of a three-phase traffic theory proposed by Kerner. This is achieved by a synchronization distance, within which a vehicle always tries to adjust its speed to the one of the vehicle in front. In the CA models presented, the modelling of the free and safe speeds, the slow-to-start rules as well as some contributions to noise are based on the ideas of the Nagel-Schreckenberg type modelling. It is shown that the proposed CA models can be very transparent and still reproduce the two main types of congested patterns (the general pattern and the synchronized flow pattern) as well as their dependence on the flows near an on-ramp, in qualitative agreement with the…
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