While it is well known that there is a significant amount of conserved
charges in the initial state of nuclear collisions, the production of these due
to gluon splitting has yet to be thoroughly investigated. The ICCING (Initial
Conserved Charges in Nuclear Geometry) algorithm reconstructs these quark
distributions, providing conserved strange, baryon, and electric charges, by
sampling a given model for the g→qqˉ​ splitting function over
the initial energy density, which is valid at top collider energies, even when
μB​=0. The ICCING algorithm includes fluctuations in the gluon longitudinal
momenta, a structure that supports the implementation of dynamical processes,
and the c++ version is now open-source. A full analysis of parameter choices on
the model has been done to quantify the effect these have on the underlying
physics. We find there is a sustained difference across the different charges
that indicates sensitivity to hot spot geometry