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Jokela

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Jokela ( Finnish pronunciation: [ˈjokelɑ] ) is one of the three administrative centers in the Finnish municipality Tuusula . It has a population of around 6,000 residents. The Jokela School Centre and the Jokela railway station serve the community. Many residents commute to the capital of Finland, Helsinki , which is about 50 kilometres (30 mi) away. The Jokela Prison , opened in 1993, is also located in the village.

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42-498: Until the mid-19th century the area around Jokela was scarcely populated. The development of Jokela began with the opening of a railway line in 1862. In 1874 the railway station was built and the first brick factory was founded. Several other brick factories would later follow to meet the needs of the rapidly growing capital as well as a match factory next to Jokela manor. The industrial development increased population: in 1920 there were 570 inhabitants and by 1950 1,617. On April 21, 1996

84-553: A rail accident occurred where four people were killed and 75 injured when express train P82 from Oulu bound for Helsinki derailed in heavy fog. There was a strict speed limit due to a bridge construction which P82 failed to heed. It is estimated that the total cost of the accident was over €4.3 million. A school shooting occurred in the town on 7 November 2007. At approximately 11:44 local time (9:44 UTC ) Pekka-Eric Auvinen opened fire at Jokela High School . The incident resulted in

126-418: A brake application to reduce speed a penalty brake application is made automatically. Due to the more sensitive handling and control issues with North American freight trains, ATC is almost exclusively applied to passenger locomotives in both inter-city and commuter service with freight trains making use of cab signals without speed control. Some high-volume passenger railroads such as Amtrak , Metro North and

168-470: A more severe penalty application that will bring the train to a stop. Neither system requires explicit speed control or adherence to a braking curve . The Union Pacific system requires an immediate brake application that cannot be released until the train's speed has been reduced to 40 mph (64 km/h) (for any train traveling above that speed). Then, the train's speed must be further reduced to no more than 20 mph (32 km/h) within 70 seconds of

210-414: Is a general class of train protection systems for railways that involves a speed control mechanism in response to external inputs. For example, a system could effect an emergency brake application if the driver does not react to a signal at danger. ATC systems tend to integrate various cab signalling technologies and they use more granular deceleration patterns in lieu of the rigid stops encountered with

252-489: Is also planned to be used on the soon to open Line 5 Eglinton line, however, Unlike on Line 1, the system on Line 5 will be supplied by Bombardier Transportation using its Cityflo 650 technology. The TTC plans to convert Line 2 Bloor-Danforth and Line 4 Sheppard to ATC in the future, subject to funding availability and being able to replace the current non-ATC compatible fleet on Line 2 with trains that are, with an estimated date of completion by 2030. ATC systems in

294-410: Is compared with the speed limit and the brakes are applied automatically if the train is travelling too fast. The brakes are released as soon as the train slows below the speed limit. This system offers a higher degree of safety, preventing collisions that might be caused by driver error, so it has also been installed in heavily used lines, such as Tokyo's Yamanote Line and some subway lines. Although

336-620: Is different from that of its neighbours. From 1978 until 1987, the Swedish ATC system was trialled in Denmark, and a new Siemens -designed ATC system was implemented between 1986 and 1988. In consequence of the Sorø railway accident , which occurred in April 1988, the new system was progressively installed on all Danish main lines from the early 1990s onwards. Some trains (such as those employed on

378-597: Is generally incompatible with ERTMS / ETCS (as in the case of the Bothnia Line which is the first railway line in Sweden to exclusively use ERTMS/ETCS), and with the aim of Trafikverket to eventually replace ATC-2 with ERTMS/ETCS over the next few decades, a Special Transmission Module (STM) has been developed to automatically switch between ATC-2 and ERTMS/ETCS. In 1906, the Great Western Railway in

420-677: Is however not used on the Copenhagen S-train commuter network, where another, incompatible safety system called HKT ( da:Hastighedskontrol og togstop ) had been in use from 1975–2022, as well as on the Hornbæk Line , which uses a much more simplified ATP system introduced in 2000. All aforementioned systems are gradually being replaced by the modern and worldwide CBTC signalling standard as of 2024. Bane NOR —the Norwegian government's agency for railway infrastructure—uses

462-661: The British Rail Automatic Warning System (AWS). Starting in 2017, the Toronto Transit Commission began the implementation of ATC on to Line 1 Yonge–University , at a cost of $ 562.3   million. Awarding the contract to Alstom in 2009, the TTC will be able to reduce the headway between trains on Line 1 during rush hours, and allow an increase in the number of trains operating on Line 1. Work would however not begin until

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504-718: The Kauhajoki school shooting . The following sports clubs are located in Jokela: 60°33′10″N 024°57′59″E  /  60.55278°N 24.96639°E  / 60.55278; 24.96639 Jokela rail accident The Jokela rail accident occurred on 21 April 1996, at 07:08 local time (04:08 UTC ) in Tuusula , Finland, approximately 50 kilometres (30 mi) north of Helsinki . Four people were killed and 75 injured when express train P82 from Oulu , bound for Helsinki, derailed in heavy fog . The overnight sleeper train

546-481: The Long Island Rail Road require the use of speed control on freight trains that run on all or part of their systems. While cab signalling and speed control technology has existed since the 1920s, adoption of ATC only became an issue after a number of serious accidents several decades later. The Long Island Rail Road implemented its Automatic Speed Control system within its cab signalled territory in

588-773: The Senseki Line in 2011, followed by the Saikyō Line in 2017, and the Koumi Line in 2020. It is considered to be Japan's equivalent to ETCS Level 3 . Several subway lines in South Korea use ATC, in some cases enhanced with ATO. All lines use ATC. All lines are enhanced with ATO. Other than on Lines 1 and 2 (MELCO cars only), all lines use ATC. Line 2 (VVVF cars), Line 5 cars, Line 6 cars, Line 7 cars, and Line 8 cars have their ATC systems enhanced with ATO. Denmark's system of ATC (officially designated ZUB 123 )

630-630: The Åsta accident occurred in 2000, the implementation of DATC on the Røros Line was accelerated, and it became operational in 2001. In Sweden the development of ATC started in the 1960s (ATC-1), and was formally introduced in the early-1980s together with high-speed trains (ATC-2/Ansaldo L10000). As of 2008, 9,831 km out of the 11,904 km of track maintained by Swedish Transport Administration —the Swedish agency responsible for railway infrastructure—had ATC-2 installed. However, since ATC-2

672-581: The Øresundståg service and some X 2000 trains) have both the Danish and the Swedish systems, while others (e.g. ten of the ICE-TD trains) are fitted with both the Danish and the German systems. The ZUB 123 system is now considered by Banedanmark , the Danish railway infrastructure company, to be obsolete and the entire Danish rail network is expected to be converted to ETCS Level 2 by 2030. The ZUB 123 system

714-826: The 1950s after a pair of deadly accidents caused by ignored signals. After the Newark Bay Lift Bridge Disaster the state of New Jersey legislated use of speed control on all major passenger train operators within the State. While speed control is used on many passenger lines in the United States, in most cases it has been adopted voluntarily by the railroads that own the lines. Only three freight railroads, Union Pacific , Florida East Coast and CSX Transportation , have adopted any form of ATC on their own networks. The systems on both FEC and CSX work in conjunction with pulse code cab signals , which in

756-475: The ATC applies the brakes automatically when the train speed exceeds the speed limit, it cannot control the motor power or train stop position when pulling into stations. However, the automatic train operation (ATO) system can automatically control departure from stations, the speed between stations, and the stop position in stations. It has been installed in some subways. However, ATC has three disadvantages. First,

798-533: The Automatic Train Control (ATC) system was developed for high-speed trains like the Shinkansen , which travel so fast that the driver has almost no time to acknowledge trackside signals. Although the ATC system sends AF signals carrying information about the speed limit for the specific track section along the track circuit . When these signals are received on board, the train's current speed

840-578: The Swedish system of ATC. Trains can therefore generally cross the border without being specially modified. However, unlike in Sweden, the ATC system used in Norway differentiates between partial ATC ( delvis ATC , DATC), which ensures that a train stops whenever a red signal is passed, and full ATC (FATC), which, in addition to preventing overshooting red signals, also ensures that a train does not exceed its maximum allowed speed limit. A railway line in Norway can have either DATC or FATC installed, but not both at

882-447: The UK developed a system known as "automatic train control". In modern terminology, GWR ATC is classified as an automatic warning system (AWS). This was an intermittent train protection system that relied on an electrically energised (or unenergised) rail between, and higher than, the running rails. This rail sloped at each end and was known as an ATC ramp and would make contact with a shoe on

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924-407: The United States are almost always integrated with existing continuous cab signalling systems. The ATC comes from electronics in the locomotive that implement some form of speed control based on the inputs of the cab signalling system. If the train speed exceeds the maximum speed allowed for that portion of track, an overspeed alarm sounds in the cab. If the engineer fails to reduce speed and/or make

966-463: The braking pattern, while ensuring ride comfort. There is also an emergency braking pattern outside the normal braking pattern and the ATC system applies the emergency brakes if the train speed exceeds this emergency braking pattern. The digital ATC system has a number of advantages: To date, the following digital ATC systems are used: ATACS is a moving block ATC system similar to CBTC , developed by RTRI and first implemented by JR East on

1008-534: The case of CSX was inherited from the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac railroad on its single main line. Union Pacific's was inherited on portions of the Chicago and Northwestern east–west main line and works in conjunction with an early two aspect cab signaling system designed for use with ATC. On CSX and FEC more restrictive cab signal changes require the engineer to initiate a minimum brake application or face

1050-404: The deaths of nine people: five male pupils and one female pupil; the school principal; the school nurse; and the shooter himself, who was also one of the school's pupils. Hours before the incident, the shooter posted a video on YouTube predicting the massacre at the school. A day after the shooting a picture of Auvinen holding a gun and a message he would "kill people at jokela high school today in

1092-542: The delivery of brand new trains with ATC compatibility and the retirement of older rolling stock that was not compatible with the new system. ATC was introduced in phases, beginning with a test on 4 November 2017 during regular service between Dupont and Yorkdale stations. It was first introduced in a permanent manner with the opening of the Toronto–York Spadina subway extension on 17 December 2017, between Vaughan and Sheppard West stations. Implementation of

1134-479: The driver failed to acknowledge this warning within a preset time, the brakes of the train would be applied. In testing, the GWR demonstrated the effectiveness of this system by sending an express train at full speed past a distant signal at caution. The train was brought safely to a stand before reaching the home signal. If the signal associated with the ramp was clear, the ramp was energised. The energized ramp would lift

1176-498: The driver retained full command of braking. The term is especially common in Japan , where ATC is used on all Shinkansen (bullet train) lines, and on some conventional rail and subway lines, as a replacement for ATS. The accident report for the 2006 Qalyoub accident mentions an ATC system. In 2017, Huawei was contracted to install GSM-R partly to provide communication services to automatic train protection systems. In Japan,

1218-413: The driver was unable to see or react in time to the distant signal that warned about a divergent routing with a turnout speed limit of 35 kilometres per hour (22 mph) ahead. The visibility was a few dozen metres. Before the accident, drivers of passing trains had reported that the visibility of signals was very low. Moreover, the printed notice about the track diversion, the so-called weekly warning,

1260-488: The headway cannot be increased due to the idle running time between releasing the brakes at one speed limit and applying the brakes at the next slower speed limit. Second, the brakes are applied when the train achieves maximum speed, meaning reduced ride comfort. Third, if the operator wants to run faster trains on the line, all the related relevant wayside and on-board equipment must be changed first. The following analogue systems have been used: The digital ATC system uses

1302-569: The journey, the driver had slightly oversped a number of times to maintain the schedule. The Accident Investigation Board produced 18 recommendations, which included improvements over railway signalling, better seat fixing, improvements on communication and accelerated building of the automatic train control system. However, the Jyväskylä rail accident happened only two years later, showing that more improvements were necessary. Automatic train control Automatic train control ( ATC )

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1344-652: The name of anonymous " was posted on the imageboard 4chan . It has been stated by the Finnish police that they could not find a connection between Auvinen and " Anonymous ". It was the second of three school shootings that have occurred in Finland. The previous incident occurred in 1989 at the Raumanmeri school in Rauma , when a 14-year-old fatally shot two fellow students. On 23 September 2008, 11 people were killed in

1386-435: The next train ahead is computed. The on-board memory also saves data on track gradients, and speed limits over curves and points. All this data forms the basis for ATC decisions when controlling the service brakes and stopping the train. In a digital ATC system, the running pattern creates determines the braking curve to stop the train before it enters the next track section ahead occupied by another train. An alarm sounds when

1428-608: The older automatic train stop (ATS) technology. ATC can also be used with automatic train operation (ATO) and is usually considered to be the safety-critical part of a railway system. There have been numerous different safety systems referred to as "automatic train control" over time. The first experimental apparatus was installed on the Henley branch line in January 1906 by the Great Western Railway , although it would now be referred to as an automatic warning system (AWS) because

1470-523: The same time. ATC was first trialled in Norway in 1979, after the Tretten train disaster , caused by a signal passed at danger (SPAD), occurred four years earlier. DATC was first implemented on the section Oslo S - Dombås - Trondheim - Grong between 1983 and 1994, and FATC was first implemented on the Ofoten Line in 1993. The high-speed Gardermoen Line has had FATC since its opening in 1998. After

1512-416: The shoe on the passing locomotive and cause a bell to sound on the footplate. If the system were to fail then the shoe would remain unenergised, the caution state; it therefore failed safe , a fundamental requirement of all safety equipment. The system had been implemented on all GWR main lines, including Paddington to Reading, by 1908. The system remained in use until the 1970s, when it was superseded by

1554-462: The system on to the remainder of the line was carried out during weekend closures and night time work when the subway would close. There were delays on the project, with deadlines for the complete conversion of Line 1 pushed back multiple times until 2022. ATC conversion was completed to Finch station on 24 September 2022. Converting all of Line 1 to ATC required the installation of 2,000 beacons, 256 signals, and more than one million feet of cable. ATC

1596-407: The track circuits to detect the presence of a train in the section and then transmits digital data from wayside equipment to the train on the track circuit numbers, the number of clear sections (track circuits) to the next train ahead, and the platform that the train will arrive at. The received data is compared with data about track circuit numbers saved in the train on-board memory and the distance to

1638-433: The train approaches the braking pattern and the brakes are applied when the braking pattern is exceeded. The brakes are applied lightly first to ensure better ride comfort, and then more strongly until the optimum deceleration is attained. The brakes are applied more lightly when the train speed drops to a set speed below the speed limit. Regulating the braking force in this way permits the train to decelerate in accordance with

1680-400: The underside of the passing locomotive. The ramps were provided at distant signals . A development of the design, intended for use at stop signals, was never implemented. If the signal associated with the ramp was at caution, the ramp would not be energised. The ramp would lift the shoe on the passing locomotive and start a timer sequence at the same time sounding a horn on the footplate. If

1722-413: Was carrying 139 passengers and five crew members. The official investigation found the accident was caused by overspeeding through a slow-speed turnout. It is estimated that the total cost of the accident was over FIM 26 million ( € 4.3 million). Railway maintenance work was going on near Jokela railway station , and the usual southbound track was out of service. Because of heavy fog and high speed,

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1764-415: Was confusingly written. When arriving at the home signal, the train was still running at 133 kilometres per hour (83 mph), having missed the distant signal imposing a limit of 35 kilometres per hour (22 mph). Upon noticing the signal, the driver made an emergency brake application but could only decrease the speed to 124 kilometres per hour (77 mph) before the train entered the turnout. During

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