Janus said:
Of course, the above equation is only accurate for values of delta v small with respect to c. The relativistic version is
$$ \Delta v = c \tanh^{-1} \left (\frac{v_e}{c} \ln \left( \frac{M_i}{M_f} \right ) \right ) $$
So for example, if we had a ## v_e## of 0.2 c and a ratio of ## \frac{M_i}{M_f} ## of 100, the first equation says that we should reach a final speed of .92c while the second only allows us to get to 0.726 c.
Now the first equation ignores all relativistic effects, thus to be fair, you would also lose any benefit gained in ship time from time dilation. It would take you 10.9 years ship time to travel 10 light years using this calculation.
With the second calculation, we get the benefit of a time dilation factor of 1.45, and thus the same 10 light year trip would take 9.47 years ship time, almost 1 1/2 years shorter.
But even 0.2c for an exhaust velocity is well beyond anything we can presently come close to, and even it required our fuel supply to be 99 times more massive than the payload to travel 10 light years in 9.47 yrs ship time.
I was mentioning this equation in the context of ion engines. Ion engine exhausts are around 50km/s which is like .00001c. Unless you make your rocket out of fuel only, I didn't see the need to bring up the relativistic effects here...
But that is my fault, because the OP specifically asked for relativistic engines, and I got side tracked into talking about the current prospects...which do not get us anywhere near relativistic speeds.
@D H: Yes, that was the point I was trying to make with the rocket equation. The point was that if you want a velocity that is much higher than your exhaust velocity, then using a rocket might not be the way to go.
I was trying to impress on the OP the difficulty of reaching truly relativistic speeds, without completely just saying "no it can't be done", but I didn't think that came through in my post. That's my fault.
Let me remedy that now.
@OP: Let's do some back of the envelope calculations! Suppose you want to go to Alpha Centauri and back in 2 years of your time. The distance to Alpha Centauri is 4ly, so you need a time dilation factor of roughly 4. This means you need a velocity of:
$$\gamma=4=\frac{1}{\sqrt{1-v^2/c^2}}$$
Solving for v:
$$v\approx .97c$$
So, how much energy would we need to get our spacecraft up to that speed? Let's assume our spacecraft is roughly the size of a space shuttle ~2000tons. And let's not worry about the fuel since we are only doing a back of the envelope calculation. The kinetic energy of this 2000 ton object going at .97c is:
$$E=\gamma mc^2=4*2,000,000kg*c^2\approx 7\cdot10^{23}J$$
This is approximately 170 Terra-tons of TNT equivalent. That's quite a lot of energy!