Two-way traffic flow: Exactly solvable model of traffic jam
- 21 December 1997
- journal article
- Published by IOP Publishing in Journal of Physics A: General Physics
- Vol. 30 (24) , 8497-8513
- https://doi.org/10.1088/0305-4470/30/24/014
Abstract
We study completely asymmetric two-channel exclusion processes in one dimension. It describes a two-way traffic flow with cars moving in opposite directions. The interchannel interaction makes cars slow down in the vicinity of approaching cars in the other lane. Particularly, we consider in detail the system with a finite density of cars on one lane and a single car on the other. When the interchannel interaction reaches a critical value, a traffic jam occurs, which turns out to be of first-order phase transition. We derive exact expressions for the average velocities, the current, the density profile and the k-point density correlation functions. We also obtain the exact probability of two cars being in one lane of distance R apart, provided there is a finite density of cars on the other lane, and show that the two cars form a weakly bound state in the jammed phase.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Particle hopping models and traffic flow theoryPhysical Review E, 1996
- Exact results for the asymmetric simple exclusion process with a blockageJournal of Statistical Physics, 1994
- Exact solution of the totally asymmetric simple exclusion process: Shock profilesJournal of Statistical Physics, 1993
- Exact diffusion constant for one-dimensional asymmetric exclusion modelsJournal of Physics A: General Physics, 1993
- Microscopic-Shock Profiles: Exact Solution of a Non-equilibrium SystemEurophysics Letters, 1993
- Generalized Bethe ansatz solution of a one-dimensional asymmetric exclusion process on a ring with blockageJournal of Statistical Physics, 1993
- Exact solution of a 1D asymmetric exclusion model using a matrix formulationJournal of Physics A: General Physics, 1993
- Finite-size effects and shock fluctuations in the asymmetric simple-exclusion processPhysical Review A, 1992