Idont Know said:
You mean energy. Power is measured in watts, not joules. Also, you asked for force, but what you probably want is impulse. Impulse is to force as energy is to power.
Idont Know said:
Much like that Project Orion, which planned to use nukes to propel a spacecraft to relativistic speeds?
You can make some simple assumptions to get the approximate impulse from a nuke from the energy. You can assume that most of the energy is reflected by the hemispherical reflector. (If energy is instead absorbed by the reflector, this means you get roughly half the impulse, and the reflector will be quickly destroyed.)
You have the kinetic energy of the blast. The total energy is given by
##E^2 = m^2 c^4 + p^2 c^2##
and the kinetic energy of the blast is
##T = E - m c^2 = \sqrt{m^2 c^4 + p^2 c^2} - m c^2 = (\gamma-1) m c^2##
The particles that make up the blast probably have a distribution of energies, but for simplicity, I assume that they all have the same energy. Then the total magnitude of momentum of the blast particles is just
##p = \gamma m v##
which we can write in terms of T
##p = (\frac{T}{m c^2} + 1) m v##
We assume the blast is spherically symmetric. Only 1/6 of the blast is in the correct direction to contribute to moving the reflector, but the momentum transferred per particle is doubled because we assume an elastic collision and that the reflector is much more massive than the blast. So, the impulse is 1/3 the total momentum.
##I = p/3##
lekh2003 said:
Orion works differently, it sets explosion outwards and propels itself normally like a regular rocket. What you are suggesting is the other way around
I honestly don't see the distinction you are raising here.