Cryogenic User Facilities for R&D on Noble Liquid Detectors and Low Temperature Devices
Y. Li, C. Zhang, M. Diwan, X. Qian, S. Martynenko, C. Thorn, J., Stewart, S. Kettell, M. Hollister, A. Chou, J. Theilacker, S. Golwala, R., Khatiwada, N. A. Kurinsky, C. Bromberg, V. Paolone

TL;DR
This paper discusses proposals for cryogenic user facilities that aim to expand testing capabilities for noble liquid detectors, low-temperature devices, and quantum research, highlighting their importance and the challenges involved.
Contribution
It introduces proposals for establishing cryogenic user facilities to enhance research access and capabilities in low-temperature physics and related fields.
Findings
Proposals aim to broaden testing capabilities for scientific community.
Cryogenic facilities are essential for advancements in particle detection and quantum research.
Addressing technical and investment challenges is crucial for facility development.
Abstract
Cryogenic test facilities are critical infrastructure for physics experiments in a variety of fields, perhaps most notably for particle detection with noble liquid detectors, low-temperature device development, and quantum information research. However, considerable investment and technical knowledge are required to construct and operate such facilities. This white paper discusses proposals for user facilities aimed at broadening the availability of testing capabilities for the scientific community.
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Taxonomy
TopicsDistributed and Parallel Computing Systems
