We report an experimental study of ultra-high-frequency chaotic dynamics generated in a delaydynamical electronic device. It consists of a transistor-based nonlinearity, commercially-available amplifiers, and a transmission-line for feedback. The feedback is band-limited, allowing tuning of the characteristic time-scales of both the periodic and high-dimensional chaotic oscillations that can be generated with the device. As an example, periodic oscillations ranging from 48 to 913 MHz are demonstrated. We develop a model and use it to compare the experimentally observed Hopf bifurcation of the steady-state to existing theory [Iiling and Gauthier, Physica D 210, 180 (2005)]. We find good quantitative agreement of the predicted and the measured bifurcation threshold, bifurcation type and oscillation frequency. Numerical integration of the model yields quasiperiodic and high dimensional chaotic solutions (Lyapunov dimension ∼13), which match qualitatively the observed device dynamics. © 2006 American Institute of Physics.
CITATION STYLE
Illing, L., & Gauthier, D. J. (2006). Ultra-high-frequency chaos in a time-delay electronic device with band-limited feedback. Chaos, 16(3). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2335814
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