English

A combinatorial model for lane merging

Combinatorics 2022-03-07 v1

Abstract

A two lane road approaches a stoplight. The left lane merges into the right just past the intersection. Vehicles approach the intersection one at a time, with some drivers always choosing the right lane, while others always choose the shorter lane, giving preference to the right lane to break ties. An arrival sequence of vehicles can be represented as a binary string, where the zeros represent drivers always choosing the right lane, and the ones represent drivers choosing the shorter lane. From each arrival sequence we construct a merging path, which is a lattice path determined by the lane chosen by each car. We give closed formulas for the number of merging paths reaching the point (n,m)(n,m) with exactly kk zeros in the arrival sequence, and the expected length of the right lane for all arrival sequences with exactly kk zeros. Proofs involve an adaptation of Andre's Reflection Principle. Other interesting connections also emerge, including to: Ballot numbers, the expected maximum number of heads or tails appearing in a sequence of nn coin flips, the largest domino snake that can be made using pieces up to [n:n][n:n], and the longest trail on the complete graph KnK_n with loops.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2203.02501,
  title  = {A combinatorial model for lane merging},
  author = {Viktoriya Bardenova and Erik Insko and Katie Johnson and Shaun Sullivan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2203.02501},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

25 pages, 8 figures, 6 tables, 6 open questions

R2 v1 2026-06-24T10:02:36.367Z