https://github.com/LS4GAN/uvcgan4slats.
Deep learning (DL) techniques have broad applications in science, especially in seeking to streamline the pathway to potential solutions and discoveries. Frequently, however, DL models are trained on the results of simulation yet applied to real experimental data. As such, any systematic differences between the simulated and real data may degrade the model's performance -- an effect known as "domain shift." This work studies a toy model of the systematic differences between simulated and real data. It presents a fully unsupervised, task-agnostic method to reduce differences between two systematically different samples. The method is based on the recent advances in unpaired image-to-image translation techniques and is validated on two sets of samples of simulated Liquid Argon Time Projection Chamber (LArTPC) detector events, created to illustrate common systematic differences between the simulated and real data in a controlled way. LArTPC-based detectors represent the next-generation particle detectors, producing unique high-resolution particle track data. This work open-sources the generated LArTPC data set, called Simple Liquid-Argon Track Samples (or SLATS), allowing researchers from diverse domains to study the LArTPC-like data for the first time. The code and trained models are available at