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Dive into the research topics where Gerhard Hermanns is active.

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Featured researches published by Gerhard Hermanns.


Transportation Research Record | 2015

Microscopic Simulation of Synchronized Flow in Oversaturated City Traffic: Effect of Driver’s Speed Adaptation

Gerhard Hermanns; Peter Hemmerle; Hubert Rehborn; Micha Koller; Boris S. Kerner; Michael Schreckenberg

Synchronized flow has been found recently in studies of empirical GPS probe-vehicle data collected in oversaturated city traffic. In this paper, results of simulations with a three-phase microscopic model from Kerner and Klenov are presented. These results show features of synchronized flow. The effect of the drivers speed adaptation was found to play the key role in understanding the emergence of synchronized flow in over-saturated city traffic. The physical meaning of the speed adaptation effect in oversaturated city traffic was explained, and the influence of the speed adaptation effect on the average speed and travel time in oversaturated city traffic was investigated.


Archive | 2014

Increased Consumption in Oversaturated City Traffic Based on Empirical Vehicle Data

Peter Hemmerle; Micha Koller; Hubert Rehborn; Gerhard Hermanns; Boris S. Kerner; Michael Schreckenberg

Congestion of urban roads causes extra travel time as well as additional fuel consumption. We present an approach to determine this additional fuel consumption on the basis of empirical vehicle data. We study probe vehicle data provided by TomTom to find the various traffic patterns of urban congestion. We use simulations of these urban traffic patterns based on a stochastic Kerner- Klenov model as input for an empirical fuel consumption matrix compiled from empirical CAN bus signals from vehicles. Our results confirm that in certain congested city traffic patterns vehicles consume more than twice as much fuel as in free city traffic.


Archive | 2016

Microscopic Simulations of Oversaturated City Traffic: Features of Synchronised Flow Patterns

Gerhard Hermanns; Peter Hemmerle; Hubert Rehborn; Boris S. Kerner; Michael Schreckenberg

Understanding the physics of vehicular traffic and the emergence of traffic patterns in city traffic is important for the implementation of traffic management measures. Recently, the synchronised flow pattern has been found in empirical GPS probe vehicle data of oversaturated city traffic (Phys Rev E 90:032810, 2014 [13]). Traffic simulation models based on classical theories cannot reproduce this synchronised flow. We present simulation results of oversaturated city traffic with the stochastic microscopic Kerner-Klenov traffic flow model that is based on Kerner’s three-phase traffic theory. These results show features of synchronised flow. It is found that the drivers speed adaptation effect plays the key role in the understanding of the emergence of synchronised flow in oversaturated city traffic. The physical meaning of the speed adaptation effect in oversaturated city traffic is explained. The influence of the speed adaptation effect on the average speed and travel time in oversaturated city traffic is investigated.


Archive | 2015

Simulations of Synchronized Flow in TomTom Vehicle Data in Urban Traffic with the Kerner-Klenov Model in the Framework of the Three-Phase Traffic Theory

Gerhard Hermanns; Igor N. Kulkov; Peter Hemmerle; Hubert Rehborn; Micha Koller; Boris S. Kerner; Michael Schreckenberg

In this article, we describe our simulations of TomTom probe vehicle data measured in city traffic. An analysis of the vehicle trajectories in the TomTom data reveals the typical features of the traffic phases as defined in Kerner’s three-phase traffic theory: free flow, synchronized flow and wide moving jam (moving queues). The existence of the synchronized flow phase has previously been found within traffic data from highways, but not within data from urban road networks. We will show that the microscopic simulation of vehicular traffic with the stochastic Kerner-Klenov model on a multi-lane urban road stretch reproduces the synchronized flow found in the TomTom data.


ZWF Zeitschrift für wirtschaftlichen Fabrikbetrieb | 2011

Verkehrsforschung in der Produktionsflussanalyse

Thomas Maschek; Benedikt Konrad; Jochen Deuse; Gerhard Hermanns; Daniel Weber; Michael Schreckenberg

Kurzfassung Methoden der statistischen Physik werden seit einigen Jahren erfolgreich auf Probleme der Verkehrsforschung angewandt. Da sich starke Analogien zwischen den Produktions- und Verkehrssystemen feststellen lassen, liegt eine Übertragung der Untersuchungsansätze in das jeweils andere Themengebiet nahe. Dieser Artikel stellt einige wichtige Verfahren beider Bereiche vor und zeigt auf, welche Vorteile ihre Kombination in der Produktionsflussanalyse generieren würde.


Physica A-statistical Mechanics and Its Applications | 2013

Effect of driver over-acceleration on traffic breakdown in three-phase cellular automaton traffic flow models

Boris S. Kerner; Sergey L. Klenov; Gerhard Hermanns; Michael Schreckenberg


Physical Review E | 2013

Synchronized flow in oversaturated city traffic.

Boris S. Kerner; Sergey L. Klenov; Gerhard Hermanns; Peter Hemmerle; Hubert Rehborn; Michael Schreckenberg


Physical Review E | 2014

Empirical synchronized flow in oversaturated city traffic.

Boris S. Kerner; Peter Hemmerle; Micha Koller; Gerhard Hermanns; Sergey L. Klenov; Hubert Rehborn; Michael Schreckenberg


Transportation Research Board 94th Annual MeetingTransportation Research Board | 2015

Macroscopic Consumption Matrix for On-line Energy-efficient Route Guidance

Peter Hemmerle; Gerhard Hermanns; Micha Koller; Hubert Rehborn; Boris S. Kerner; Michael Schreckenberg


Collective Dynamics | 2016

Impact of Synchronised Flow in Oversaturated City Traffic on Energy Efficiency of Conventional and Electrical Vehicles

Peter Hemmerle; Micha Koller; Gerhard Hermanns; Hubert Rehborn; Boris S. Kerner; Michael Schreckenberg

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Sergey L. Klenov

Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology

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Igor N. Kulkov

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Andreas Kretschmer

Dresden University of Technology

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Benedikt Konrad

Technical University of Dortmund

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