PeterE wrote:
I'm no engineer, but it's my understanding that, as speed rises, the amount of brake force required increases geometrically, so it would take (roughly) twice the force to slow from 80 to 40 than it would to slow from 40 to 0. Therefore braking times increase more than relative to speed. This is why the theoretical maximum throughput of a road (assuming keeping a "safe" distance) occurs at around 17 mph.
The braking force is constant with speed, depending only on the amount of pedal pressure applied. However, as the brake disks are moving at twice the speed relative to the pads at twice the vehicle speed, the amount of energy dissipated by the brakes is twice as much per unit time with the same force. And, as the vehicle takes twice the time to stop from twice the speed, the total energy dissipated is 2 x 2 = 4 times as much - which fits in nicely with the formula: kinetic energy = 0.5 * mass * (speed) squared
But with modern brakes the limiting factor is not the braking force but almost always the friction coefficient between the tyres and the road. Nonetheless, the deceleration is virtually linear with speed, so you'll take twice the time to brake from twice the speed. (which equates to 4 times the distance)
I don't see what this has got to do with the throughput of the road, though.
