The movement of people, goods, vehicles, trains, ships, and airplanes from one place to another is called traffic. Controlling traffic involves attempts to make these movements as fast, safe, and efficient as possible.
This article deals primarily with ground vehicle traffic control—cars, buses, and trucks. (See also Airport; Navigation; Railroad; Roads and Streets.)
The urban areas of most industrialized nations are clogged with road traffic. In such large cities as Rome, Cairo, New York City, Los Angeles, and Tokyo, the cars seem to outnumber the people. Traffic often moves so slowly that streets become virtual parking lots. Even the building of multilane expressways has not alleviated the problem. Added to the congestion, there is ever-worsening air and noise pollution, a rising toll of accidents and fatalities, and frequently inadequate public transportation.
All governments regulate both drivers and their vehicles. Drivers are regulated by age, by the kinds of vehicles they are allowed to drive, and often by the need to own vehicle insurance. Vehicles are regulated by registration requirements, proof of ownership, required accessories, sizes, weights, and mechanical trustworthiness. Governments also bear the responsibility for road and highway construction and maintenance, for regulation of speed, and for posting traffic signals and other signs.
Control techniques.
The basic elements of traffic control focus on highway construction techniques, flow of traffic, and the use of signs and other devices. The essential features of major routes include the separation of different kinds of traffic, for example; grade separations such as overpasses or multilevel highways; and control of entrance and exit. On some toll roads flow of traffic is partially controlled by the need to stop at tollbooths to pay fees.
In large cities that have a great amount of daily traffic, the flow of vehicles is often eased by limiting the use of streets. One way to achieve this is by using systems of one-way streets. Another means of aiding traffic flow is by regulating curbside parking and prohibiting the loading and unloading of trucks on heavily traveled thoroughfares.
The most common way of regulating traffic is through the use of signs and signals. Signs perform a variety of functions. Some are prohibitions—no left turn, no parking, no passing. Others give commands—stop, yield, keep right. Warning signs tell drivers of potentially hazardous road conditions—slippery when wet, deer crossing, narrow bridge. Many are merely informative—distances between towns, the location of information offices and parking and service facilities.
In Europe, where many languages are in use, a system of signs has been developed that employs symbols instead of words to convey messages. Such signs have proved so successful that they are gradually being adopted in other parts of the world. In contrast to printed signs, traffic signals are electronically operated. The most familiar are the red and green stop-and-go signals. Some of these incorporate directional arrows for left or right turns or straight-ahead traffic. Traffic signals are either pretimed or traffic-activated. Pretimed control signals allocate a specific interval for each stream of traffic at an intersection. The length of the time cycle varies from 30 to 150 seconds. In some cities the signals along some routes are master-controlled—all the signals in a given direction are green or red simultaneously (or in a closely timed sequence) to allow for a steady flow of traffic.
Traffic-activated signals vary the time and sequence in response to actual traffic conditions. The flow of traffic is measured by electronic detectors. These signals are useful at an intersection where one street carries a great deal of traffic, while a cross street handles a moderate number of vehicles.
Computers have made possible more extensive systems of control, especially in areas like Los Angeles that have vast networks of expressways. These systems help drivers get onto the roads and warn them of such hazards as lane closures, fog, or accidents.
Extracted from Encyclopedia Britannica 2009 (Student and Home Edition)
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