Publications by authors named "V Link"

The microbiota colonizes each barrier site and broadly controls host physiology. However, when uncontrolled, microbial colonists can also promote inflammation and induce systemic infection. The unique strategies employed at each barrier tissue to control the coexistence of the host with its microbiota remain largely elusive.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

With the goal to study dissipative Landau-Zener (LZ) sweeps in realistic solid-state qubits, we utilize novel methods from non-Markovian open quantum system dynamics that enable reliable long-time simulations for sub-Ohmic environments. In particular, we combine a novel representation of the dynamical propagator, the uniform time evolving matrix product operator method, with a stochastic realization of finite temperature fluctuations. The latter greatly reduces the computational cost for the matrix product operator approach, enabling convergence in the experimentally relevant deeply sub-Ohmic regime.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Taking care of body tissues is super important for survival, especially in places like the skin that face the outside world.
  • When skin is exposed to certain harmless chemicals, it can actually help heal itself better by activating special immune cells called CD8 T cells.
  • These immune cells help speed up healing when there’s a wound by producing a substance called IL-17A, showing that our body can adapt to protect itself better against injuries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Approaching the long-time dynamics of non-Markovian open quantum systems presents a challenging task if the bath is strongly coupled. Recent proposals address this problem through a representation of the so-called process tensor in terms of a tensor network. We show that for Gaussian environments highly efficient contraction to a matrix product operator (MPO) form can be achieved with infinite MPO evolution methods, leading to significant computational speed-up over existing proposals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study examines how genetic differences in mice (C57BL/6 and BALB/c strains) affect macrophages' (TRMs) responses to cytokine IL-4 and lipopolysaccharide (LPS).
  • C57BL/6 TRMs show a stronger transcriptional response to IL-4, with specific genetic motifs and enhanced epigenomic changes compared to BALB/c TRMs.
  • Findings suggest that intrinsic genetic variation influences the macrophages' ability to respond synergistically to IL-4 and LPS in the same tissue environment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF