The present invention relates to the technical field of security control of rail transport signals, and in particular, to a train movement authorization method based on vehicle-to-vehicle cooperation.
A core system of a traditional communication based train control system (CBTC)—an “automatic train protection system” (ATP) consists of two parts: a trackside part and an on-board part. The trackside part is mainly responsible for collecting information of trackside devices and trains, calculating movement authorization for all trains on a line, and sending the movement authorization to an on-board ATP. To achieve this function, the trackside ATP must maintain positions and status information of all trains within a management region of the trackside ATP and a management region of an adjacent trackside ATP. In addition, the trackside ATP must further maintain information of a train on a boundary of an adjacent trackside ATP on a boundary of the current trackside ATP, to ensure that the train can operate without stopping in management regions of a plurality of trackside ATP devices. The trackside ATP undertakes key functions and has a relatively large management region, and therefore, has strict requirements on reliability. Therefore, simplifying a design of the trackside ATP as much as possible to reduce a probability that the trackside ATP goes wrong is an important direction for designing and developing the CBTC system. Core functions of the trackside ATP—train information maintenance and movement authorization calculation not only involve a large quantity of numerical calculation, but also require support of complex interfaces between adjacent trackside ATPs. If such functions are designed to be calculated by the on-board ATP, a numerical calculation function of the trackside ATP and an interface between the trackside ATPs are completely removed, so that complexity of the entire CBTC system can be greatly simplified.
In a train movement authorization method based on vehicle-vehicle cooperation, train movement authorization is calculated through direct information interaction between trains, including operation modes such as train tracking and face-to-face driving. The trackside ATP is only responsible for maintaining sequence information of online operating trains and providing the information to the on-board ATP.
The present invention provides a method for person re-identification based on a depth multi-loss fusion model to overcome the shortcomings existing in the prior art.
The purpose of the disclosure may be realized by the following technical solutions.
A train movement authorization method based on vehicle-to-vehicle cooperation is provided, where the method includes the following steps:
Preferably, after the obtaining, by a train, task information of the current train from an automatic train supervision system (ATS) in step 1, the train calculates, based on a current train task, a list of all track resources that the train needs to sequentially pass through.
Preferably, after the obtaining, by the train, current resource allocation information from a trackside resource management center in step 2, the resource allocation information is described by using train sequences in a train information container (TIC).
Preferably, the TIC is an approach used to divide a track section based on resources, and the TIC is a section without a fork or is a turnout; an ID of the train appearing in one TIC indicates that the trackside resource manager considers that the train is capable of using the TIC resource.
Preferably, if an ID of only the current train exists in the train information container (TIC) in step 2, a movement authorization range of the train crosses a track section corresponding to the entire TIC.
Preferably, if an ID of another train exists in the train information container (TIC) in step 3, the current train determines an ID of a first train in downstream of the current train based on an operation direction of the current train and an order of arranging train IDs in the TIC (the train IDs in the TIC are arranged in an agreed order, for example, along an up direction of a line).
Preferably, the train calculates an expected train envelope (ETE) based on the task information of the train and calculates a guaranteed train envelope (GTE) based on a current operation status of the train in step 4, and the expected train envelope (ETE) and the guaranteed train envelope (GTE) are used to respond to a movement authorization report for a movement authorization request of another train.
Preferably, in step 4, the train calculates, based on the ETE, a movement authorization request that needs to be sent to the downstream train of the train, where the request includes ETE information of the current train.
Preferably, in step 5, the current train calculates the movement authorization of the train based on a movement authorization request and a movement authorization report that are sent by the downstream first train of the current train, and calculates a movement authorization report used to respond to a movement authorization request of another train.
Preferably, in step 6, the train determines, based on a current movement authorization location and by comparing operation tasks of trains, a next TIC that the train needs to apply for, and generates a resource application request to be sent to the resource management center.
Compared with the prior art, the present invention has the following advantages:
1. In the method of the present invention, a movement authorization calculation function in a design of an existing CBTC system is changed to on-board direct calculation through vehicle-to-vehicle information interaction, to replace a centralized calculation method of a trackside ATP in the existing CBTC system.
2. Based on the present invention, complexity of the trackside ATP is reduced, and a numerical calculation module of the trackside ATP and an interface between trackside ATPs are completely removed.
3. The on-board ATP in the present invention implements train tracking, track resource competition and coordination, and train face-to-face operation with higher efficiency through vehicle-to-vehicle information interaction that is based on a request/confirmation mechanism.
The technical solutions in the embodiments of the present invention are clearly and completely described hereafter. It is apparent that the described embodiments are some rather than all of the embodiments of the present invention. Based on the embodiments of the present invention, all the other embodiments obtained by those of ordinary skill in the art without inventive effort shall fall within the protection scope of the present invention.
A topological structure of vehicle-to-ground/vehicle-to-vehicle communication of a CBTC system based on vehicle-to-vehicle cooperation is shown in
When performing information interaction with another train, the train first needs to obtain information of “which trains need to be interacted with”. This information is maintained by the trackside ATP (the resource management center), sent to the on-board ATP and is described by using a train sequence on a track section (description is performed by using a TIC). Based on the sequence, the on-board ATP may determine ID information of a closest train in downstream of the operation direction of the train. The on-board ATP calculates movement authorization of the on-board ATP by directly requesting for train information from a downstream train in the operation direction. In addition to basic train operation information (a location, a speed, and a direction), information that the train needs to exchange should further include an expected train envelope (ETE) and a guaranteed train envelope (GTE).
As shown in
d=f(t1, t2, vt, am, as, ae)
where t1 is a traction removing time of the train, t2 is a braking application time of the train, vt is a current operation speed of the train, am is a maximum traction acceleration of the train, as is an equivalent acceleration of the train on a maximum slope, ae is a guaranteed emergency braking acceleration (negative value) of the train.
A basic calculation principle is that after the on-board ATP issues a braking instruction, the train goes through the following three stages:
traction removing: at an acceleration stage, the train still has traction;
braking application: at a coasting stage, the traction of the train has been removed, but the train is still affected by the equivalent slope acceleration; and
emergency braking: a process in which the train stops under an action of the guaranteed emergency braking acceleration.
Operation distances at the above three stages are separately calculated as follows:
Therefore, a distance that the guaranteed train envelope needs to extend from a maximum train head location to the operation direction of the train is:
d=f(t1, t2, vt, am, as, ae)=Σi=13di.
In a procedure shown in
In step 4, the on-board ATP calculates an “expected train envelope” based on an operation task of the train, and if the ID that is calculated in the previous step and that is of the first train in downstream of the operation direction is valid, the on-board ATP should send the “expected train envelope” to the downstream train of the train by using a movement authorization request, and the movement authorization should not be extended before a reply from the downstream train is obtained. In addition to location and direction information, the “expected train envelope” should further include a time identifier (indicated by a count of a main period of the on-board ATP) when the train sends the information and an operation priority of the train. When receiving an “expected train envelope” sent by another train, the on-board ATP should first determine whether a priority of the train sending the expected envelope is higher than that of the current train, and if the priority of the train sending the expected envelope is higher than that of the current train, an ending point of the “expected train envelope” should be a limiting point for calculating movement authorization of the current train. If the ending point of the “expected train envelope” falls within a range of a “guaranteed train envelope” of the current train, the current train should apply emergency braking. If the ending point of “expected train envelope” falls within downstream of an ending point of the “guaranteed train envelope” of the current train, the ending point of the “guaranteed train envelope” sent by the current train by using the train movement authorization report should be extended to the ending point of the “expected train envelope”. If the current train finds that a priority of the train sending the request is lower than that of the current train, a “guaranteed train envelope” in a to-be-returned train movement authorization report should be set to an invalid value.
In step 5, after receiving the train movement authorization report returned by the downstream train, the on-board ATP first determines timeliness of the train movement authorization report, and if a time identifier included in the train movement authorization report is not less than a time identifier of a moment when the current train initiates a train movement authorization request, the current train should use the “guaranteed train envelope” in the train movement authorization report, and calculate movement authorization of the train.
What is mentioned above is only the specific implementation of the present invention, but does not limit the protection scope of the present invention, and anyone skilled in the art can easily think of mortifications and alternations within the technical scope disclosed by the present invention, all of which shall fall within the protection scope of the present invention. Therefore, the protection scope of the present invention should be determined by the protection scope of the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
201810575896.4 | Jun 2018 | CN | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/CN2019/078247 | 3/15/2019 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2019/233153 | 12/12/2019 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
9718487 | Ghaly | Aug 2017 | B2 |
10259478 | Gao | Apr 2019 | B1 |
10297153 | Gao | May 2019 | B2 |
11148691 | Gao | Oct 2021 | B2 |
20100241296 | Rhea, Jr. | Sep 2010 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
104149821 | Nov 2014 | CN |
104149821 | Nov 2014 | CN |
106515797 | Mar 2017 | CN |
107054413 | Aug 2017 | CN |
107284471 | Oct 2017 | CN |
107650949 | Feb 2018 | CN |
107745729 | Mar 2018 | CN |
106828542 | Aug 2018 | CN |
109080667 | Dec 2018 | CN |
107757656 | Feb 2020 | CN |
2018091231 | May 2018 | WO |
Entry |
---|
“Sehchan Oh, Yongki Yoon, Minsoo Kim, Yongkyu Kim, ATP Functional Allocation for Korean Radio based Train Control System, Oct. 17, 2012, 12th International Conference on Control, Automation and Systems” (Year: 2012). |
International Search Report (in English and in Chinese) and Written Opinion issued in PCT/CN2019/078247, mailed Jun. 14, 2019, 12 pages provided. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20200406943 A1 | Dec 2020 | US |