A traffic light does not just pause movement; it triggers an energy dump. When a car decelerates, kinetic energy that once carried the vehicle forward is forced into the brake system through friction, where the brake pads clamp a disc rotor and convert motion into thermal energy in a fraction of a minute.
The counterintuitive part is how violent this conversion is. A highway stop can push rotor surfaces toward temperatures that would send water to a rolling boil almost on contact, the result of frictional work described by the basic relation Q = F × d applied at high speed, with cast iron and composite materials acting as both heat sink and structural component.
That intensity is precisely managed, not incidental. Ventilated rotors, high-friction pad compounds, and forced convection from airflow are engineered to control heat transfer and prevent brake fade, a failure mode in which overheated pads lose friction coefficient and hydraulic systems struggle to translate pedal force into stopping power.
Every stoplight therefore functions as a small, repeatable experiment in thermodynamics. Conservation of energy, friction coefficients, and specific heat capacity all play out in plain sight, turning an ordinary brake pedal press into a tightly constrained conversion of ordered motion into disordered molecular agitation.