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Abstract We investigate the performance of , a 7.5 GPU-accelerated photon propagation tool compared with a single-threaded simulation. We compare the simulations using an improved model of the gaseous time projection chamber. Performance results suggest that improves simulation speeds by between$$58.47\pm {0.02}$$ and$$181.39\pm {0.28}$$ times relative to a CPU-only simulation and these results vary between different types of GPU and CPU. A detailed comparison shows that the number of detected photons, along with their times and wavelengths, are in good agreement between and .more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available August 1, 2026
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Navarro, KE; Baeza-Rubio, J; Boyd, M; Foss, FW; Giri, S; Jones, BJP; Miller, RL; Nygren, DR; Samaniego, FJ; Stogsdill, K; et al (, Journal of Instrumentation)Abstract We present a tunable metal ion beam that delivers controllable ion currents in the picoamp range for testing of dry-phase ion sensors. Ion beams are formed by sequential atomic evaporation and single or multiple electron impact ionization, followed by acceleration into a sensing region. Controllability of the ionic charge state is achieved through tuning of electrode potentials that influence the retention time in the ionization region. Barium, lead, and cadmium samples have been used to test the system, with ion currents identified and quantified using a quadrupole mass analyzer. Realization of a clean Ba2+ ion beam within a bench-top system represents an important technical advance toward the development and characterization of barium tagging systems for neutrinoless double beta decay searches in xenon gas. This system also provides a testbed for investigation of novel ion sensing methodologies for environmental assay applications, with dication beams of Pb2+and Cd2+also demonstrated for this purpose.more » « less
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