Generalizable Foundation Models for Calorimetry via Mixtures-of-Experts and Parameter Efficient Fine Tuning

arXiv:2603.2880411.9h-index: 14
Predicted impact top 82% in INS-DET · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
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For particle physics experiments, this provides a scalable and extensible simulation framework that addresses the growing computational demands of high-luminosity detectors.

This work introduces a generalizable foundation model for calorimetry using next-token transformer backbones with Mixture-of-Experts pre-training and parameter-efficient fine-tuning, enabling modular adaptation across materials and particle types without catastrophic forgetting. The model achieves computational competitiveness with standard generative approaches under LLM optimization procedures.

Modern particle physics experiments face an increasing demand for high-fidelity detector simulation as luminosities rise and computational requirements approach the limits of available resources. Deep generative models have emerged as promising surrogates for traditional Monte Carlo simulation, with recent advances drawing inspiration from large language models (LLM) and next-token prediction paradigms. In this work, we introduce a generalizable foundation model for calorimetry built on next-token transformer backbones, designed to support modular adaptation across materials, particle species, and detector configurations. Our approach combines Mixture-of-Experts pre-training with parameter-efficient fine-tuning strategies to enable controlled, additive model expansion without catastrophic forgetting. A pre-trained backbone is trained to generate electromagnetic showers across multiple absorber materials, while new materials are incorporated through the addition and tuning of lightweight expert modules. Extensions to new particle types are achieved via parameter-efficient fine-tuning and modular vocabularies, preserving the integrity of the base model. This design enables efficient, incremental knowledge integration as new simulation datasets become available, a critical requirement in realistic detector-development workflows. In addition, we demonstrate that next-token calorimeter models are computationally competitive with standard generative approaches under established LLM optimization procedures. These results establish next-token architectures as a viable path toward extensible, physics-aware foundation models for calorimetry and future high-energy physics experiments.

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