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Mode of transport

A mode of transport is a method or way of traveling, or of transporting people or cargo.[1] The different modes of transport include air, water, and land transport, which includes rails or railways, road and off-road transport. Other modes of transport also exist, including pipelines, cable transport, and space transport. Human-powered transport and animal-powered transport are sometimes regarded as distinct modes, but they may lie in other categories such as land or water transport.

In general, transportation refers to the moving of people, animals, and other goods from one place to another, and means of transport refers to the transport facilities used to carry people or cargo according to the chosen mode. Examples of the means of transport include automobile, airplane, ship, truck, and train. Each mode of transport has a fundamentally different set of technological solutions. Each mode has its own infrastructure, vehicles, transport operators and operations.

Animal-powered edit

Animal-powered transport is the use of working animals for the transport of people and/or goods. Humans may use some of the animals directly, use them as pack animals for carrying goods, or harness them, alone or in teams, to pull watercraft, sleds, or wheeled vehicles.

Air edit

 
Air France Airbus A318 landing at London Heathrow Airport

A fixed-wing aircraft, typically airplane, is a heavier-than-air flying vehicle, in which the special geometry of the wings generates lift and then lifts the whole vehicle. Fixed-wing aircraft range from small trainers and recreational aircraft to large airliners and military cargo aircraft. For short distances or in places without runways, helicopters can be operable.[2] (Other types of aircraft, like autogyros and airships, are not a significant portion of air transport.)

Air transport is the fastest method of transport, Commercial jets reach speeds of up to 955 kilometres per hour (593 mph) and a considerably higher ground speed if there is a jet stream tailwind, while piston-powered general aviation aircraft may reach up to 555 kilometres per hour (345 mph) or more. This celerity comes with higher cost and energy use,[3] and aviation's impacts to the environment and particularly the global climate require consideration when comparing modes of transportation.[4] The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) estimates a commercial jet's flight to have some 2-4 times the effect on the climate than if the same CO2 emissions were made at ground level, because of different atmospheric chemistry and radiative forcing effects at the higher altitude.[5] U.S. airlines alone burned about 16.2 billion gallons of fuel during the twelve months between October 2013 and September 2014.[6] WHO estimates that globally as many as 500,000 people at a time are on planes.[3] The global trend has been for increasing numbers of people to travel by air, and individually to do so with increasing frequency and over longer distances, a dilemma that has the attention of climate scientists and other researchers,[7][8][9] the press,[10][11] and the World Wide Web.[12] The issue of impacts from frequent travel, particularly by air because of the long distances that are easily covered in one or a few days, is called hypermobility and has been a topic of research and governmental concern for many years.

Human powered edit

 
Human-powered transport remains common in developing countries.

Human powered transport, a form of sustainable transportation, is the transport of people and/or goods using human muscle-power, in the form of walking, running and swimming. Modern technology has allowed machines to enhance human power. Human-powered transport remains popular for reasons of cost-saving, leisure, physical exercise, and environmentalism; it is sometimes the only type available, especially in underdeveloped or inaccessible regions.

Although humans are able to walk without infrastructure, the transport can be enhanced through the use of roads, especially when using the human power with vehicles, such as bicycles and inline skates. Human-powered vehicles have also been developed for difficult environments, such as snow and water, by watercraft rowing and skiing; even the air can be entered with human-powered aircraft.

Land edit

Land transport covers all land-based transportation systems that provide for the movement of people, goods and services. Land transport plays a vital role in linking communities to each other. Land transport is a key factor in urban planning. It consists of 2 kinds, rail and road.

Rail edit

 
German ICE 1 on the Nuremberg–Munich high-speed railway

Rail transport is a means of conveyance of passengers and goods by way of wheeled vehicles running on rail track, known as a railway or railroad. The rails are anchored perpendicular to railroad train consists of one or more connected vehicles that run on the rails. Propulsion is commonly provided by a locomotive, that hauls a series of unpowered cars, that can carry passengers or freight. The locomotive can be powered by steam, diesel or by electricity supplied by trackside systems. Alternatively, some or all the cars can be powered, known as a multiple unit. Also, a train can be powered by horses, cables, gravity, pneumatics and gas turbines. Railed vehicles move with much less friction than rubber tires on paved roads, making trains more energy efficient, though not as efficient as ships.

Intercity trains are long-haul services connecting cities;[13] modern high-speed rail is capable of speeds up to 430 km/h (270 mph), but this requires a specially built track. Regional and commuter trains feed cities from suburbs and surrounding areas, while intra-urban transport is performed by high-capacity tramways and rapid transits, often making up the backbone of a city's public transport. Freight trains traditionally used box cars, requiring manual loading and unloading of the cargo. Since the 1960s, container trains have become the dominant solution for general freight, while large quantities of bulk are transported by dedicated trains.

Road edit

 
Traffic on the Eastshore Freeway (Interstate 80) near Berkeley, California, United States
 
Bus, cars and bicycles
 
Trams, lorries, cars, bicycles and rickshaws, 1945

A road is an identifiable route of travel, usually surfaced with gravel, asphalt or concrete, and supporting land passage by foot or by a number of vehicles.

The most common road vehicle in the developed world is the automobile, a wheeled passenger vehicle that carries its own motor. As of 2002, there were 591 million automobiles worldwide.[citation needed] Other users of roads include motorcycles, buses, trucks, bicycles and pedestrians, and special provisions are sometimes made for each of these. For example, bus lanes give priority for public transport, and cycle lanes provide special areas of road for bicycles to use.

Automobiles offer high flexibility, but are deemed with high energy and area use, and the main source of noise and air pollution in cities; buses allow for more efficient travel at the cost of reduced flexibility.[14] Road transport by truck is often the initial and final stage of freight transport.

Water edit

 
Car ferry in Split, Croatia

Water transport is the process of transport that a watercraft, such as a bart, ship or sailboat, makes over a body of water, such as a sea, ocean, lake, canal, or river. If a boat or other vessel can successfully pass through a waterway it is known as a navigable waterway. The need for buoyancy unites watercraft, and makes the hull a dominant aspect of its construction, maintenance and appearance. When a boat is floating on the water the hull of the boat is pushing aside water where the hull now is, this is known as displacement.

In the 1800s, the first steamboats were developed, using a steam engine to drive a paddle wheel or propeller to move the ship. The steam was produced using wood or coal. Now, most ships have an engine using a slightly refined type of petroleum called bunker fuel. Some ships, such as submarines, use nuclear power to produce the steam. Recreational or educational craft still use wind power, while some smaller craft use internal combustion engines to drive one or more propellers, or in the case of jet boats, an inboard water jet. In shallow draft areas, hovercraft are propelled by large pusher-prop fans.

Although slow, modern sea transport is a highly effective method of transporting large quantities of non-perishable goods. Commercial vessels, nearly 35,000 in number, carried 7.4 billion tons of cargo in 2007.[15] Transport by water is significantly less costly than air transport for transcontinental shipping;[16] short sea shipping and ferries remain viable in coastal areas.[17][18]

Other modes edit

Micromobility is the collective name for small electric powered vehicles.

 
The Trans-Alaska Pipeline System conveys crude oil from the Prudhoe Bay Oil Field to Valdez, Alaska.

Pipeline transport sends goods through a pipe, most commonly liquid and gases are sent, but pneumatic tubes can also send solid capsules using compressed air. For example, liquids/gases, any chemically stable liquid or gas can be sent through a pipeline. Short-distance systems exist for sewage, slurry water and beer, while long-distance networks are used for petroleum and natural gas.

Cable transport is a broad mode where vehicles are pulled by cables instead of an internal power source. It is most commonly used at steep gradient. Typical solutions include aerial tramway, elevators, escalator and ski lifts; some of these are also categorized as conveyor transport.

Space transport is transport out of Earth's atmosphere into outer space by means of a spacecraft. While large amounts of research have gone into technology, it is rarely used except to put satellites into orbit, and conduct scientific experiments. However, people have landed on the moon, and probes have been sent to all the planets of the Solar System.

Unmanned aerial vehicle transport (drone transport) is being used for medicine transportation in least developed countries with inadequate infrastructure by an American-based start-up Zipline.[19] Amazon.com and other transportation companies are currently testing the use of unmanned aerial vehicles in parcel delivery. This method will allow short-range small-parcel delivery in a short time frame.

Components of a mode of transport edit

A transport mode is a combination of the following:

Comparison of the transport mode by distance travelled edit

Worldwide, the most widely used modes for passenger transport are the Automobile (16,000 bn passenger km), followed by Buses (7,000), Air (2,800), Railways (1,900), and Urban Rail (250).[20]

The most widely used modes for freight transport are Sea (40,000 bn ton km), followed by Road (7,000), Railways (6,500), Oil pipelines (2,000) and Inland Navigation (1,500).[20]

Passenger km per capita in different regions[20]
EU 15
[clarification needed]
US Japan World
GDP (PPP) per capita (€)
(for comparison)
19,000 28,600 26,000 7,500
Private car 10,100 33,200 6,200 2,700
Bus/coach 1,050 150 740 1,200
Railway 750 78 2,900 32
Air (domestic except World) 860 2,800 580 480

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "mode of transport". Collins Dictionary. Retrieved 14 July 2023.
  2. ^ Cooper et al., 1998: 281
  3. ^ a b Swine flu prompts EU warning on travel to the US. The Guardian. April 28, 2009.
  4. ^ The Future of Air Transport White Paper (2009), HMSO "The aviation industry is encouraged to take account of, and where appropriate reduce, its contribution to global warming...The impact of aviation on climate change is increased over that of direct CO2 emissions alone by some of the other emissions released and their specific effects at altitude".
  5. ^ IPCC, Aviation and the Global Atmosphere: A Special Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (2000), Cambridge University Press
  6. ^ Why airfare keeps rising despite lower oil prices 2014-11-20 at the Wayback Machine, by Scott Mayerowitz, Assoc. Press Airlines Writer. Houston Chron., November 17, 2014.
  7. ^ Cohen, S.; Higham, J.; Cavaliere, C. (2011). "Binge flying: Behavioural addiction and climate change" (PDF). Annals of Tourism Research. 38 (3): 1070–1089. doi:10.1016/j.annals.2011.01.013.
  8. ^ Cohen, S. A.; Higham, J. E. (2011). "Eyes wide shut? UK consumer perceptions on aviation climate impacts and travel decisions to New Zealand" (PDF). Current Issues in Tourism. 14 (4): 323–335. doi:10.1080/13683501003653387. S2CID 154791383.
  9. ^ Anderson, K.; Bows, A. (2008). "Reframing the climate change challenge in light of post-2000 emission trends". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences. 366 (1882): 3863–3882. Bibcode:2008RSPTA.366.3863A. doi:10.1098/rsta.2008.0138. PMID 18757271. S2CID 8242255.
  10. ^ Jenkins S. (2009). Hypermobility is now the opium of the people, an obsession that wrecks communities and planet. The Guardian. 22 Dec. 2009.
  11. ^ Rosenthal E. (2010). Can we kick our addiction to flying? Guardian, UK. 24 May 2010.
  12. ^ Internet search for travel addiction.
  13. ^ Cooper et al., 1998: 279
  14. ^ Cooper et al., 1998: 278
  15. ^ United Nations Conference on Trade and Development 2007, p. x and p. 32.
  16. ^ Stopford, 1997: 4–6
  17. ^ Stopford, 1997: 8–9
  18. ^ Cooper et al., 1998: 280
  19. ^ "Zipline - Lifesaving Deliveries by Drone". flyzipline.com. Retrieved 2019-04-11.
  20. ^ a b c (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-10-11. Retrieved 2006-05-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

mode, transport, mode, transport, method, traveling, transporting, people, cargo, different, modes, transport, include, water, land, transport, which, includes, rails, railways, road, road, transport, other, modes, transport, also, exist, including, pipelines,. A mode of transport is a method or way of traveling or of transporting people or cargo 1 The different modes of transport include air water and land transport which includes rails or railways road and off road transport Other modes of transport also exist including pipelines cable transport and space transport Human powered transport and animal powered transport are sometimes regarded as distinct modes but they may lie in other categories such as land or water transport In general transportation refers to the moving of people animals and other goods from one place to another and means of transport refers to the transport facilities used to carry people or cargo according to the chosen mode Examples of the means of transport include automobile airplane ship truck and train Each mode of transport has a fundamentally different set of technological solutions Each mode has its own infrastructure vehicles transport operators and operations Contents 1 Animal powered 2 Air 3 Human powered 4 Land 4 1 Rail 4 2 Road 5 Water 6 Other modes 7 Components of a mode of transport 8 Comparison of the transport mode by distance travelled 9 See also 10 ReferencesAnimal powered editMain article Animal powered transport Animal powered transport is the use of working animals for the transport of people and or goods Humans may use some of the animals directly use them as pack animals for carrying goods or harness them alone or in teams to pull watercraft sleds or wheeled vehicles Air editMain articles Aviation and Environmental impact of aviation nbsp Air France Airbus A318 landing at London Heathrow AirportA fixed wing aircraft typically airplane is a heavier than air flying vehicle in which the special geometry of the wings generates lift and then lifts the whole vehicle Fixed wing aircraft range from small trainers and recreational aircraft to large airliners and military cargo aircraft For short distances or in places without runways helicopters can be operable 2 Other types of aircraft like autogyros and airships are not a significant portion of air transport Air transport is the fastest method of transport Commercial jets reach speeds of up to 955 kilometres per hour 593 mph and a considerably higher ground speed if there is a jet stream tailwind while piston powered general aviation aircraft may reach up to 555 kilometres per hour 345 mph or more This celerity comes with higher cost and energy use 3 and aviation s impacts to the environment and particularly the global climate require consideration when comparing modes of transportation 4 The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change IPCC estimates a commercial jet s flight to have some 2 4 times the effect on the climate than if the same CO2 emissions were made at ground level because of different atmospheric chemistry and radiative forcing effects at the higher altitude 5 U S airlines alone burned about 16 2 billion gallons of fuel during the twelve months between October 2013 and September 2014 6 WHO estimates that globally as many as 500 000 people at a time are on planes 3 The global trend has been for increasing numbers of people to travel by air and individually to do so with increasing frequency and over longer distances a dilemma that has the attention of climate scientists and other researchers 7 8 9 the press 10 11 and the World Wide Web 12 The issue of impacts from frequent travel particularly by air because of the long distances that are easily covered in one or a few days is called hypermobility and has been a topic of research and governmental concern for many years Human powered editMain article Human powered transport nbsp Human powered transport remains common in developing countries Human powered transport a form of sustainable transportation is the transport of people and or goods using human muscle power in the form of walking running and swimming Modern technology has allowed machines to enhance human power Human powered transport remains popular for reasons of cost saving leisure physical exercise and environmentalism it is sometimes the only type available especially in underdeveloped or inaccessible regions Although humans are able to walk without infrastructure the transport can be enhanced through the use of roads especially when using the human power with vehicles such as bicycles and inline skates Human powered vehicles have also been developed for difficult environments such as snow and water by watercraft rowing and skiing even the air can be entered with human powered aircraft Land editMain article Ground transportation See also Off road transport Land transport covers all land based transportation systems that provide for the movement of people goods and services Land transport plays a vital role in linking communities to each other Land transport is a key factor in urban planning It consists of 2 kinds rail and road Rail edit Main article Rail transport nbsp German ICE 1 on the Nuremberg Munich high speed railwayRail transport is a means of conveyance of passengers and goods by way of wheeled vehicles running on rail track known as a railway or railroad The rails are anchored perpendicular to railroad train consists of one or more connected vehicles that run on the rails Propulsion is commonly provided by a locomotive that hauls a series of unpowered cars that can carry passengers or freight The locomotive can be powered by steam diesel or by electricity supplied by trackside systems Alternatively some or all the cars can be powered known as a multiple unit Also a train can be powered by horses cables gravity pneumatics and gas turbines Railed vehicles move with much less friction than rubber tires on paved roads making trains more energy efficient though not as efficient as ships Intercity trains are long haul services connecting cities 13 modern high speed rail is capable of speeds up to 430 km h 270 mph but this requires a specially built track Regional and commuter trains feed cities from suburbs and surrounding areas while intra urban transport is performed by high capacity tramways and rapid transits often making up the backbone of a city s public transport Freight trains traditionally used box cars requiring manual loading and unloading of the cargo Since the 1960s container trains have become the dominant solution for general freight while large quantities of bulk are transported by dedicated trains Road edit Main article Road transport nbsp Traffic on the Eastshore Freeway Interstate 80 near Berkeley California United States nbsp Bus cars and bicycles nbsp Trams lorries cars bicycles and rickshaws 1945A road is an identifiable route of travel usually surfaced with gravel asphalt or concrete and supporting land passage by foot or by a number of vehicles The most common road vehicle in the developed world is the automobile a wheeled passenger vehicle that carries its own motor As of 2002 there were 591 million automobiles worldwide citation needed Other users of roads include motorcycles buses trucks bicycles and pedestrians and special provisions are sometimes made for each of these For example bus lanes give priority for public transport and cycle lanes provide special areas of road for bicycles to use Automobiles offer high flexibility but are deemed with high energy and area use and the main source of noise and air pollution in cities buses allow for more efficient travel at the cost of reduced flexibility 14 Road transport by truck is often the initial and final stage of freight transport Water editMain article Ship transport nbsp Car ferry in Split CroatiaWater transport is the process of transport that a watercraft such as a bart ship or sailboat makes over a body of water such as a sea ocean lake canal or river If a boat or other vessel can successfully pass through a waterway it is known as a navigable waterway The need for buoyancy unites watercraft and makes the hull a dominant aspect of its construction maintenance and appearance When a boat is floating on the water the hull of the boat is pushing aside water where the hull now is this is known as displacement In the 1800s the first steamboats were developed using a steam engine to drive a paddle wheel or propeller to move the ship The steam was produced using wood or coal Now most ships have an engine using a slightly refined type of petroleum called bunker fuel Some ships such as submarines use nuclear power to produce the steam Recreational or educational craft still use wind power while some smaller craft use internal combustion engines to drive one or more propellers or in the case of jet boats an inboard water jet In shallow draft areas hovercraft are propelled by large pusher prop fans Although slow modern sea transport is a highly effective method of transporting large quantities of non perishable goods Commercial vessels nearly 35 000 in number carried 7 4 billion tons of cargo in 2007 15 Transport by water is significantly less costly than air transport for transcontinental shipping 16 short sea shipping and ferries remain viable in coastal areas 17 18 Other modes editMicromobility is the collective name for small electric powered vehicles nbsp The Trans Alaska Pipeline System conveys crude oil from the Prudhoe Bay Oil Field to Valdez Alaska Pipeline transport sends goods through a pipe most commonly liquid and gases are sent but pneumatic tubes can also send solid capsules using compressed air For example liquids gases any chemically stable liquid or gas can be sent through a pipeline Short distance systems exist for sewage slurry water and beer while long distance networks are used for petroleum and natural gas Cable transport is a broad mode where vehicles are pulled by cables instead of an internal power source It is most commonly used at steep gradient Typical solutions include aerial tramway elevators escalator and ski lifts some of these are also categorized as conveyor transport Space transport is transport out of Earth s atmosphere into outer space by means of a spacecraft While large amounts of research have gone into technology it is rarely used except to put satellites into orbit and conduct scientific experiments However people have landed on the moon and probes have been sent to all the planets of the Solar System Unmanned aerial vehicle transport drone transport is being used for medicine transportation in least developed countries with inadequate infrastructure by an American based start up Zipline 19 Amazon com and other transportation companies are currently testing the use of unmanned aerial vehicles in parcel delivery This method will allow short range small parcel delivery in a short time frame Components of a mode of transport editA transport mode is a combination of the following Transportation infrastructure thoroughfares networks hubs stations bus terminals airport terminals etc Vehicles and containers motor vehicles automobiles motorcycles trucks wagons trains ships and aircraft A stationary or mobile workforce Propulsion system and power supply traction Operations driving management traffic signals railway signalling air traffic control etc Comparison of the transport mode by distance travelled editThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information November 2020 Worldwide the most widely used modes for passenger transport are the Automobile 16 000 bn passenger km followed by Buses 7 000 Air 2 800 Railways 1 900 and Urban Rail 250 20 The most widely used modes for freight transport are Sea 40 000 bn ton km followed by Road 7 000 Railways 6 500 Oil pipelines 2 000 and Inland Navigation 1 500 20 Passenger km per capita in different regions 20 EU 15 clarification needed US Japan WorldGDP PPP per capita for comparison 19 000 28 600 26 000 7 500Private car 10 100 33 200 6 200 2 700Bus coach 1 050 150 740 1 200Railway 750 78 2 900 32Air domestic except World 860 2 800 580 480See also editModal share Car ownershipReferences edit mode of transport Collins Dictionary Retrieved 14 July 2023 Cooper et al 1998 281 a b Swine flu prompts EU warning on travel to the US The Guardian April 28 2009 The Future of Air Transport White Paper 2009 HMSO The aviation industry is encouraged to take account of and where appropriate reduce its contribution to global warming The impact of aviation on climate change is increased over that of direct CO2 emissions alone by some of the other emissions released and their specific effects at altitude IPCC Aviation and the Global Atmosphere A Special Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2000 Cambridge University Press Why airfare keeps rising despite lower oil prices Archived 2014 11 20 at the Wayback Machine by Scott Mayerowitz Assoc Press Airlines Writer Houston Chron November 17 2014 Cohen S Higham J Cavaliere C 2011 Binge flying Behavioural addiction and climate change PDF Annals of Tourism Research 38 3 1070 1089 doi 10 1016 j annals 2011 01 013 Cohen S A Higham J E 2011 Eyes wide shut UK consumer perceptions on aviation climate impacts and travel decisions to New Zealand PDF Current Issues in Tourism 14 4 323 335 doi 10 1080 13683501003653387 S2CID 154791383 Anderson K Bows A 2008 Reframing the climate change challenge in light of post 2000 emission trends Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences 366 1882 3863 3882 Bibcode 2008RSPTA 366 3863A doi 10 1098 rsta 2008 0138 PMID 18757271 S2CID 8242255 Jenkins S 2009 Hypermobility is now the opium of the people an obsession that wrecks communities and planet The Guardian 22 Dec 2009 Rosenthal E 2010 Can we kick our addiction to flying Guardian UK 24 May 2010 Internet search for travel addiction Cooper et al 1998 279 Cooper et al 1998 278 United Nations Conference on Trade and Development 2007 p x and p 32 Stopford 1997 4 6 Stopford 1997 8 9 Cooper et al 1998 280 Zipline Lifesaving Deliveries by Drone flyzipline com Retrieved 2019 04 11 a b c Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2010 10 11 Retrieved 2006 05 26 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mode of transport amp oldid 1211700464, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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