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Application of open tools and datasets to probabilistic modeling of road traffic disruptions due to earthquake damage
Author(s) -
Costa Catarina,
Figueiredo Rui,
Silva Vitor,
Bazzurro Paolo
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
earthquake engineering and structural dynamics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.218
H-Index - 127
eISSN - 1096-9845
pISSN - 0098-8847
DOI - 10.1002/eqe.3288
Subject(s) - probabilistic logic , duration (music) , seismic hazard , hazard , transport engineering , flow network , population , computer science , event (particle physics) , traffic flow (computer networking) , geography , engineering , civil engineering , computer security , mathematics , artificial intelligence , art , mathematical optimization , chemistry , demography , literature , organic chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , sociology
Summary The disruption of a transportation network can have a high social and economic impact on the welfare of a society, as it can significantly affect the daily routines of a community. Although many studies have focused on the estimation of physical risk in the components that compose these networks, only a limited number have analyzed their interconnections and impact in the traffic flow. The present study analyzes how earthquake damage can disrupt the road network in an urban environment, and how this will influence the ability of the population to travel. Traffic due to daily commutes is modeled for different layouts of the network, corresponding to possible disruptions caused by earthquake damage. The duration and length of each trip were calculated both for the undamaged network conditions and for the disrupted network. The increase in the median duration and length of each trip allows estimating the economic loss for each event due to drivers' delay. By combining the probability of a specific road being blocked with its number of users, the average number of affected vehicles was estimated, and the most critical segments identified. The methodology was applied to a case study concerning the road network of the area around the Italian city of Messina in Sicily. The results were calculated for both a repetition of the well‐known historical event of 1908 and a set of simulated earthquakes consistent with the national probabilistic seismic hazard model of Italy.