
Science Beats Traffic Ticket for Rolling Through Stop Sign
Physics professor uses graphs and formulas to prove his innocence and baffle the judge.
If you remember being bored to tears in physics class, you may want to dig out your old textbook in case you’re ever pulled over by police for rolling through a stop sign. A University of California, San Diego, professor used his physics prowess to beat a $400 traffic ticket issued when a police officer observed him allegedly running a stop sign.
According to an article in Physics Central, Krioukov drafted a four-page defense paper, arguing that the police officer only mistakenly thought he ran the stop sign.
Before the judge, the physicist posited that the officer, who was parked 100 feet away from the stop sign, was approximating the angular velocity -- not the linear velocity -- of the professor’s Toyota Yaris; this, argued the prof, could give the observer a skewed perception of the driver's actual speed. Krioukov says he was driving his Yaris when he sneezed as he approached the stop sign, which caused him to brake hard.
Toyota doesn’t publish the stopping distance of the Yaris, but Krioukov estimated that he decelerated at 22.36 mph. He said that a larger vehicle about the size of a Subaru Outback passed his Toyota Yaris and obstructed the officer's view of his full and complete stop.
Krioukov used graphs and mathematical formulas to show that, to an observer, a vehicle traveling at a constant speed could look very similar to a vehicle that decelerated quickly to a complete stop and then rapidly accelerated at the exact moment the vehicle came to a stop, if the view of the vehicle was obscured. Since the Outback-like vehicle didn't have a stop sign, Krioukov maintained that the vehicle's larger length concealed his car for a crucial few seconds. As he accelerated away quickly, the officer mistakenly thought he never stopped and had performed a classic “California roll.”
Apparently, the judge hadn’t studied physics and dismissed the case rather than refute physicist’s findings. But as a devotee to the scientific method and peer review, Krioukov claims there could be a potential flaw in his proof and invites people to discover it on their own.
We suspect it may have something to do with the vehicle in question, since Krioukov claims his Yaris managed to go from 22 mph to 0 and then back to 22 in the span of three seconds. We don't know physics at that level, but we do know cars, and that's not exactly what we’d expect from the subcompact.
Dig out your physics textbook if you want study the full paper, titled The Proof of Innocence.
[Source: Autoblog]
charlesw62,
I wonder how your H2 would fare in a head-on collision with a fully loaded semi. What the hell does your comment have to do with the article? NOTHING! Typical arrogant and clueless Hummer H2/H3 owner thinking they're invincible. Sorry, the H2 is a turd, and it was ranked among the worst vehicles on the market EVERY YEAR that it was in production. The only Hummers worth anything are the original ones prior to when they were known as the H1. That is prior to when GM bought out the brand. Let's see you crowing when fuel hits $5+ a gallon, then we'll see who is laughing. That said, owning an H2 isn't that smart. Not everyone can afford or wants a Hummer H2. Not everyone needs to compensate for their flaws. From the sound of your post, you own one, and drive around town in it. That sounds pretty stupid to me. Tell me, have you taken it off road? Do you even know how to drive off road? If not, you're a poser and have no business commenting. I have done a lot of off-road driving, and I can show you trails around here that you will NEVER get an H2 down. The H2 isn't as good as you think it is.
The biggest killer of traffic tickets in court is a FEDERAL book called the MUTCD. it is estimated that at least 70% of traffic tickets are not legal due to violations of the MUTCD.
The other way to kill a ticket is to find case law that proves your point. This is not 100% but I have found that if you come to court dressed to the nines and with case law and such in hard paper form, the court says dismissed, they don't want to argue with a citizen who is prepared to fight and has the documents in hand.
This guys paper is good to help you prove your point but don't think that only this doc will get you out of paying.
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