ThinksMarkedly wrote:TFLYTSNBN wrote:The orientation of the exhaust from a fusion rocket has little effect on the ability to detect it. The plasma has an exhaust velocity of "only" 1/10 Cee. You are not detecting the exhaust particles directly. You detect the X-rays, UV, visible, IR and radio emitted by the plasma as it cools.
I'll take your word for it, but if you have links for more information, I'd like to read more. About the fusion rocket system, that is, I know how plasma works.
In fact, having the plasma pointed sideways to you would make the length of the plasma bigger, as opposed to the cross-section of its expansion in the directions perpendicular to the motion of the ship. On the other hand, a head-on plasma is consistently at the same location in space, so the effects are additive, whereas a sideways one is spread over a distance as the ship is moving.
We are still struggling to develope viable fusion reactors. The power to mass ratio of any prospective devices is on the order of a Gigawatt per 10,000 tons. Fusion rockets with high specific impulse would have to have power densities several orders of magnitude higher to give us even a few hundredths of a gee acceleration. My comments about Petawatt or even Exawatt power levels are based on actual calculations rather than wild ass guesses.
A few hints.
Thrust = Mass Flow Rate * Exhaust Velocity
Power = 1/2 * Mass Flow Rate * (Exhaust Velocity)^2
The theoretical Exhaust Velocity varies with the particular fusion fuel and reaction utilized, but 3x10^7 m/s or 1/10 Cee is about right.
The bottom line is that your power density needs to be on the order of 100 Megawatt per Kilogram to give your starship an asccelleration of one Gee.
I had some interesting correspondence with the late Dr Jerry Pournelle about Light Sails and THE MOTE IN GODS EYE. It turns out that the power density needed for a light sail is only about an order of magnitude higher than for a fusion rocket, and the Sun provides the power. Pournelle and Niven took artistic license to make the Moties extremely powerful launching lasers necessary. Lightsails are probably the most plausible technology for starships. Even if the mass to surface area of the sail is not as low as desired, massive Fresnell lenses to concentrate solar power can easily enable acceleration of one tenth gee for a month to give a transit velocity of 1% Cee.