Alex Ames
alexmames.bsky.social
Alex Ames
@alexmames.bsky.social
compressible turbulent mixing 4 lyfe

postdoc, skier, climber, biker in Los Alamos, NM
Find me an industrial user who only wants to run the plant three hours a day and we’re cooking!
November 15, 2025 at 6:55 AM
Batteries and solar make a lot of sense! But you don’t want to have to curtail output for all of January because it’s persistently overcast
November 15, 2025 at 1:55 AM
Why would a cost-sensitive, downtime-sensitive industrial user build a janky spendy microgrid when they can just hook up to a regional grid with 3 hrs downtime per year?

If you want that H2 to be made using electrolysis instead of extracted from CH4, you better make sure electricity is damn cheap!
November 15, 2025 at 1:54 AM
We need a relentless focus on *reducing* electric rates if we want to drive broad decarbonization. The task becomes so much harder if natural gas remains cheaper than electricity for heating (residential & industrial). Reduce electricity prices and gravity will take you most of the rest of the way
November 15, 2025 at 1:17 AM
If residential distribution infra needs to be subsidized, do it transparently out of the broadly-levied tax base instead of Rube Goldberg redistribution from electrified industry. Do we really want to double the cost of green steel production?
November 15, 2025 at 1:08 AM
Over the past six months, I have seen way, way, way more news articles with "NNSA" in the headline than I feel remotely comfortable with. I woke up in March to a NYT article headline plastered across a picture of the building my experiment sits in. Fun!
October 30, 2025 at 4:54 AM
Let’s be extra careful to avoid describing work as “super critical”
October 30, 2025 at 4:03 AM
NNSA comprises 2k feds overseeing 60k contractors. Feds are mostly furloughed, contractors are doing some creative accounting to stretch carryover funds from previous years as long as possible. Things are still running (for now!)
October 30, 2025 at 3:06 AM
I ran the numbers for my own location (which has some idiosyncratic constraints) and mortgage cost has more than doubled. Painful for my upper-quartile household, prohibitive for anyone scraping by
I'm trying to buy a house and folks, it's bad out there. The monthly price of an average-house, average-rate mortgage where I live has gone from $1500 to $3600 in the past 3.5 years.
October 28, 2025 at 5:00 AM
Strong recommendation for Blockenheimer - blocking likers/followers of the Stancil reply posts gets multiple birds with one stone
Blockenheimer for Bluesky
block.alxtratrstrl.xyz
October 24, 2025 at 5:04 AM
Bad scientific imaging (from a science perspective) can still be hot shit from a photography perspective
October 11, 2025 at 4:32 AM
October 10, 2025 at 2:29 PM
Conversely, the correct level of tax & transfer from DINKs to parents is the level that allows parents to enjoy a standard of living (vacations, house, etc.) equal to DINKs
October 8, 2025 at 4:48 PM
We are social creatures, and we compare ourselves to those who are actually around us, not some statistical median. The reference class of the $150k -> $75k household is their friends and neighbors: are they foregoing vacations and downsizing their homes to be able to afford kids?
October 8, 2025 at 4:45 PM
It’s the *opportunity cost* of kids. The more you could make in wage income, the more it costs to stay home and raise kids. This is compounded by factors like housing: DINKs need less space than families but have more money and can bid up the price of housing in high-demand areas
October 8, 2025 at 3:54 PM
It’s also one thing to be charismatic in one-on-one interactions (something most politicians are actually good at!) and another entirely to still be widely entertaining when talking to a mass audience (without being devoid of substance or alienating some constituency by misspeaking or generalizing)
October 1, 2025 at 6:16 PM
It’s also not particularly actionable advice for most candidates! Always-on charisma is rare enough, but it’s a heaven-sent gift to be able to keep the charisma flowing even when communicating about the inner workings of government.
October 1, 2025 at 6:13 PM
I'm in the middle of a realtor-free off-market purchase and let me tell you, it is delightful to pay a lawyer $850 to do paperwork instead of 10-20x that for a realtor
September 26, 2025 at 8:03 PM
Had an incident in grad school where a check valve at the bottom of another lab’s 500 gallon water tank failed and leaked through the high bay floor into our experiment’s very expensive lasers in the basement. Had to fly a technician in from Lithuania to fix them.

We were the pit.
September 24, 2025 at 7:35 PM
Linux is great for headless servers and SW dev work, but everyone I know who uses it as their primary desktop environment has horror stories about audio/graphics drivers that could be fixed only after hours of mucking around in a terminal
September 22, 2025 at 12:27 AM
In a laboratories-of-democracy sense, I think that sort of experiment would be really valuable. I’m glad that Sam Brownback fucked up Kansas and showed everyone else that you shouldn’t do that. Lots of people think that they could fix everything if only they controlled the economy - let’s try that!
September 13, 2025 at 5:19 AM
Does “public goods” mean goods that are non-rivalrous and non-excludable, or just goods that you think the government should provide to the public? The latter definition seems politically circular. Aren’t asset managers still needed when the public owns the assets, or are we doing direct democracy?
September 13, 2025 at 5:11 AM
I have a deep and abiding love for carbon taxation, but voters seem to really hate it no matter how you package it. Canada had a beautiful carbon tax & rebate system and Mark Carney just rolled it back to get elected! I think it’ll take a fiscal crisis to concretize it as a revenue source
September 13, 2025 at 4:55 AM
We test medical interventions on small groups before broad roll-out because novel things don’t always work. MA, CA, HI, NY, etc should be able to show that you can decarbonize without driving up consumer prices and provoking voter revolt that drags us backwards into O&G hell. Are they currently? No.
September 13, 2025 at 4:45 AM
For the bulk of American voters, economic democracy means voting for cheap gas and low utility bills. We can’t get all the way to where we need to go on the price mechanism alone, but a laser focus on decreasing the consumer cost of the energy transition will make the rest of the work so much easier
September 13, 2025 at 4:35 AM