 Quote by ahmedtmedhat
can't we use this photonic laser thruster in vehicles... i mean cant you build a car working on this concept?
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If you don't mind being restricted to moving along a perfectly straight line, clear of obstacles and without anything to jostle the vehicle and interfere with alignment with the multi-gigawatt laser pointed at you. If this is so, then yes, you could build a car working on this concept.
This is essentially just a laser sail craft, with additional optics that bounce the light back at the "sail" so it reflects off multiple times. The multiple reflections within the cavity formed by the emitter and payload do increase the outward thrust on both. Alignment has to be very precisely maintained as the payload moves away, and the size and precision requirements of the reflecting elements will limit the distance at which this works...diffraction limits require large optics, large and high precision optics will tend to be heavy, large and lightweight optics won't be precise enough to manage multiple bounces. A plain old light sail might work better, due to being a bigger target that can be hit at longer range, while being far lower mass. Acceleration will be lower, but can be kept up for a longer time.
The power source is nuclear and nuclear reactors are heavy, but the power source is essentially stationary. Mass on the laser end just reduces the recoil accelerations and lets you go longer between corrections to the launch platform's orbit. Those corrections do require propellant, but the launch platform doesn't go anywhere, it stays put where it can easily be reached for propellant resupply.