Analysis of Fixed-Time Control
read the original abstract
A network of signalized intersections is modeled as a queuing network. The intersections are regulated by fixed-time (FT) controls, all with the same cycle length or period, $T$. Vehicles arrive from outside the network at entry links in a deterministic periodic stream, also with period $T$, make turns at intersections in fixed proportions, and eventually leave the network. Vehicles take a fixed time to travel along each link, and at the end of the link they join a queue. There is a separate queue at each intersection for each movement. The storage capacity of the queues is infinite, so there is no spill back. The state of the network at time $t$ is the vector $x(t)$ of all queue lengths, together with the position of vehicles traveling along the links. The state evolves according to a delay-differential equation. Suppose the network is stable, that is, $x(t)$ is bounded. Then (1) there exists a unique periodic trajectory $x^*(t)$, with period $T$; (2) every trajectory converges to this periodic trajectory; (3) if vehicles do not follow loops, the convergence occurs in finite time. The periodic trajectory determines the performance of the entire network.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.