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Motorists Spend Six Months Of Lives In Traffic Jams!

The research says that many of the traffic jams are 'phantom' bottlenecks which appear for no apparent reason and then disperse.
Eddie Wilson, from Bristol University reckons that he has solved the riddle of stop-and-go waves of traffic. He has developed a “string stability analysis" in order to devise a computer model to explain why traffic suddenly builds up and then dissipates just as quickly.
It takes one road user to get to close to the car in front and hit the brakes. The driver behind does the same thing, as do hundreds of motorists in succession, and within few minutes there"s a ripple which can stretch miles.
"The stop-and-go waves are generated by very small events at the level of individual vehicles," says Dr Wilson.
He says that the small events like the bad lane changes have much bigger impacts on the whole. In certain situations, a tipping point is reached that magnifies small effects to create large changes which can trouble hundreds of people or the vehicles which may be a couple of miles long, continues Dr Wilson.
"We've
seen
individual
phantom
jams
that
have
traveled
over
50
miles
down
the
motorway
and
on
Bank
Holiday
Fridays,
the
entire
M6
from
Birmingham
to
the
Lake
District
is
often
stop-go
the
whole
way," he
added.



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