Chirality

Bidirectional traffic

In transportation infrastructure, a bidirectional traffic system divides travellers into two streams of traffic that flow in opposite directions. In the design and construction of tunnels, bidirectional traffic can markedly affect ventilation considerations. Microscopic traffic flow models have been proposed for bidirectional automobile, pedestrian, and railway traffic. Bidirectional traffic can be observed in ant trails which have been researched for insight into human traffic models. In a macroscopic theory proposed by Laval, the interaction between fast and slow vehicles conforms to the Newell kinematic wave model of moving bottlenecks. In air traffic control traffic is normally separated by elevation, with east bound flights at odd thousand feet elevations and west bound flights at even thousand feet elevations (1000 ft ≈ 305m). Above 28,000 ft (~8.5 km) only odd flight levels are used, with FL 290, 330, 370, etc., for eastbound flights and FL 310, 350, 390, etc., for westbound flights. Entry to and exit from airports is always one-way traffic, as runways are chosen to allow aircraft to take off and land into the wind, to reduce ground speed. Even in no wind cases, a preferred calm wind runway and direction is normally chosen and used by all flights, to avoid collisions. In uncontrolled airports, airport information can be obtained from anyone at the airport. Traffic follows a specific traffic pattern, with designated entry and exits. Radio announcements are made, whether anyone is listening or not, to allow any other traffic to be aware of other traffic in the area. In the earliest days of railways in the United Kingdom, most lines were built double tracked because of the difficulty of coordinating operations in pre-telegraphy times. Most modern roads carry bidirectional traffic, although one-way traffic is common in dense urban centres. Bidirectional traffic flow is believed to influence the rate of traffic collisions. In an analysis of head-on, rear-end, and lane-changing collisions based on the Simon-Gutowitz bidirectional traffic model, it was concluded that "the risk of collisions is important when the density of cars in one lane is small and ... the other lane['s] is high enough," and that "heavy vehicles cause an important reduction of traffic flow on the home lane and provoke an increase of the risk of car accident." Bidirectional traffic is the most common form of flow observed in trails, however, some larger pedestrian concourses exhibit multidirectional traffic. (Wikipedia).

Bidirectional traffic
Video thumbnail

The Biggest Modes Of Transportation Built By Humans | Supersized Structures | Spark

The human race is constantly looking for a better way to get from point A to point B, from tall ships to the invention of the automobile, travel has always been a necessity. We rely on increasingly massive transportation like planes, trains, ships and everything in between. -- Many of mank

From playlist Supersized Structures

Video thumbnail

Introduction to Direct Traffic | Marketing Analytics for Beginners | Part-13

In Google Analytics, Direct Traffic is one of the metrics used to study the source of your website traffic. Users who visit the website without third-party interference fall under the category of direct traffic. However, problems often line up when Google Analytics cannot recognize the sou

From playlist Marketing Analytics for Beginners

Video thumbnail

LinkedIn

If you are interested in learning more about this topic, please visit http://www.gcflearnfree.org/ to view the entire tutorial on our website. It includes instructional text, informational graphics, examples, and even interactives for you to practice and apply what you've learned.

From playlist LinkedIn

Video thumbnail

HTML Links

In this video, you’ll learn about how links function in HTML. We hope you enjoy! To learn more, check out our Basic HTML tutorial here: https://edu.gcfglobal.org/en/basic-html/ #html #links #coding

From playlist HTML

Video thumbnail

Why Traffic Exists: Psychological Gridlock

Why Traffic Exists: Psychological Gridlock - Traffic Explained We're almost at 1,000,000 subscribers, please consider subscribing! Follow me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mcewen/ Traffic sucks. We've all been there. When the cars don't move, the lights don't change, and before y

From playlist Philosophy & Psychology 🧠

Video thumbnail

Logic 1 - Propositional Logic | Stanford CS221: AI (Autumn 2019)

For more information about Stanford’s Artificial Intelligence professional and graduate programs, visit: https://stanford.io/3ChWesU Topics: Logic Percy Liang, Associate Professor & Dorsa Sadigh, Assistant Professor - Stanford University http://onlinehub.stanford.edu/ Associate Professor

From playlist Stanford CS221: Artificial Intelligence: Principles and Techniques | Autumn 2019

Video thumbnail

the Internet (part 2)

An intro to the core protocols of the Internet, including IPv4, TCP, UDP, and HTTP. Part of a larger series teaching programming. See codeschool.org

From playlist The Internet

Video thumbnail

When less is more - Logistics of Axonal Transport by Kinesin-2 by Krishanu Ray

Collective Dynamics of-, on- and around Filaments in Living Cells: Motors, MAPs, TIPs and Tracks DATE: 28 October 2017 to 02 November 2017 VENUE: Ramanujan Lecture Hall, ICTS Bangalore Our knowledge of cytoskeletal filaments, nucleic acid filaments (DNA and RNA) as well as their associat

From playlist Collective Dynamics of-, on- and around Filaments in Living Cells: Motors, MAPs, TIPs and Tracks

Video thumbnail

CERIAS Security: Hazard Spaces Knowing Where, When, What Hazards Occur 5/6

Clip 5/6 Speaker: Peter Bajcsy · University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign/ National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) While considering all existing hazards for humans due to (a) natural disastrous events, (b) failures of human hazard attention or (c) intentional harmful

From playlist The CERIAS Security Seminars 2005 (2)

Video thumbnail

Manipulating Binomial Coefficients (2 of 2: Pascal's Identity)

More resources available at www.misterwootube.com

From playlist Working with Combinatorics

Video thumbnail

What is a force?

Describes what forces are and what they do. You can see a listing of all my videos at my website, http://www.stepbystepscience.com

From playlist Mechanics

Video thumbnail

The Dynein Catch Bond - Implications for cooperative transport by Mithun Mitra

Date & Time: 17 February 2017 to 19 February 2017 VENUE: Ramanujan Lecture Hall, ICTS, Bengaluru This is an annual discussion meeting of the Indian statistical physics community which is attended by scientists, postdoctoral fellows, and graduate students, from across the country, working

From playlist Indian Statistical Physics Community Meeting 2017

Video thumbnail

Black Hat USA 2010: Attacking Kerberos Deployments 3/4

Speakers: Scott Stender, Brad Hill & Rachel Engel The Kerberos protocol is provides single sign-on authentication services for users and machines. Its availability on nearly every popular computing platform - Windows, Mac, and UNIX variants - makes it the primary choice for enterprise aut

From playlist BH USA 2010 - OS WARS

Video thumbnail

Stanford CS224N: NLP with Deep Learning | Winter 2019 | Lecture 7 – Vanishing Gradients, Fancy RNNs

For more information about Stanford’s Artificial Intelligence professional and graduate programs, visit: https://stanford.io/3c7n6jW Professor Christopher Manning & PhD Candidate Abigail See, Stanford University http://onlinehub.stanford.edu/ Professor Christopher Manning Thomas M. Sieb

From playlist Stanford CS224N: Natural Language Processing with Deep Learning Course | Winter 2019

Video thumbnail

Traffic on filaments: Molecular motors under difficult conditions by Stefan Klumpp

Collective Dynamics of-, on- and around Filaments in Living Cells: Motors, MAPs, TIPs and Tracks DATE: 28 October 2017 to 02 November 2017 VENUE: Ramanujan Lecture Hall, ICTS Bangalore Our knowledge of cytoskeletal filaments, nucleic acid filaments (DNA and RNA) as well as their associat

From playlist Collective Dynamics of-, on- and around Filaments in Living Cells: Motors, MAPs, TIPs and Tracks

Video thumbnail

Sound Propagation With Bidirectional Path Tracing | Two Minute Papers #111

The paper "Interactive Sound Propagation with Bidirectional Path Tracing" is available here: http://gaps-zju.org/bst/ Veach's paper on Multiple Importance Sampling: http://www.cs.jhu.edu/~misha/ReadingSeminar/Papers/Veach95.pdf http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=218498 I am also holding a

From playlist Two Minute Papers

Video thumbnail

A brief history of the Transformer architecture in NLP

🏛️ The Transformer architecture has revolutionized Natural Language Processing, being capable to beat the state-of-the-art on overwhelmingly numerous tasks! Check out this video for a brief history of the Transformer development. Related video: How do we check if a neural network has lear

From playlist The Transformer explained by Ms. Coffee Bean

Video thumbnail

19. Trialpay

Alex Rampell, founder and CEO of Trialpay, discusses distribution channels and partnerships. Concepts such as bidirectional relevance and channel conflict are discussed. Take the quizzes and find the rest of the course at http://eesley.blogspot.com Stanford University: http://www.stanfor

From playlist Lecture Collection | Technology Entrepreneurship

Video thumbnail

Understanding Routing! | ICT#8

The amazing journey of data packets from a data center to your device forms the backbone of the Internet. This data flow is governed to make the most efficient transfer of the data. It is apparent from this animation that this governing of the data, from the source to the destination, thro

From playlist Internet & Telecommunication Technology

Related pages

Macroscopic scale | Microscopic traffic flow model