Transport network


A transport network, or transportation network is a realisation of a spatial network, describing a structure which permits either vehicular movement or flow of some commodity.
Examples include but are not limited to road networks, railways, air routes, pipelines, aqueducts, and power lines.

Methods

Transport network analysis is used to determine the flow of vehicles through a transport network, typically using mathematical graph theory. It may combine different modes of transport, for example, walking and car, to model multi-modal journeys. Transport network analysis falls within the field of transport engineering. Traffic has been studied extensively using statistical physics methods.
Recently a real transport network of Beijing was studied using a network approach and percolation theory.
The research showed that one can characterize the quality of global traffic in a city at each time in the day using percolation threshold, see Fig. 1.
In recent articles, percolation theory has been applied to study traffic congestion in a city. The quality of the global traffic in a city at a given time is by a single parameter, the percolation critical threshold. The critical threshold represents the velocity below which one can travel in a large fraction of city network. The method is able to identify repetitive traffic bottlenecks.
Critical exponents characterizing the cluster size distribution of good traffic are similar to those of percolation theory.
An empirical study regarding the size distribution of traffic jams has been performed recently by Zhang et al. They found an approximate universal power law for the jam sizes distribution.