((OOC: There is a small fusion plant in East Anglia that produces as much power as it takes in. It is what the big plant being built in France (Or Switzerland? i cant remember) is based on. It cant produce any more than it is at the moment, as it isn't large enough.
The Jet, which is the reactor you're referring to, has managed to output at most 65% of what it requires to power up. If this is different, please come up with an article funding the claim.
plasma and Ion based engines (in fact, any space engine that isn't chemical or solid fueled) require a hell of a lot of power. Fusion produces a hell of a lot of power. I didn't mean the reactor itself being the engine, i meant it powering the thing that is the engine, whether it be electromagnetic, plasma or ion based. Also, fission safer than fusion? Fission has a whole load of things that could go wrong with it, many of them ending in meltdown (something you REALLY dont want in space). Not to mention its fuel is radioactive in the extreme. Fusion has zero chance of meltdown, and its fuels are not radioactive (or, at least, nowhere near as radioactive as plutonium and uranium). The only fission based plants that are safe are ones based on thorium as a fuel.
Fission is very, very stable. Core damage happens on a scale of 10
-7 occasions per reactor per year. (Theoretical level for Third gen, which would be the ones incorporated in spacecraft.) Besides, there are many very safe nuclear reactor designs (And a few unsafe thorium designs). And only the bare minimum of core damage incidents end in reactor meltdown (There have been like, 3 over the entire history of nuclear engineering. ).
Fusion meanwhile requires a massive amount of energy to start. Once you have an event where the reactor is shut down, for whatever reason. (Much more likely than a core failure), your ship is lost, having no power for engines or lifesupport. Besides, both standard nuclear and fusion have the problem of heat dissipation. There's a reason all nuclear reactors are build next to large bodies of water, after all.
Besides, fusion produces quite a bit of radiation, and tritium is rather radioactive.
Not sure where you got 'Fusion is dangerous' from. If a fusion plant went critical, the only thing that would happen is that the sphere containing the reaction would shear off all the bolts holing it stationary, fire upwards half a mile, spinning several thousand times per minute, before coming crashing down again. Nowhere near as dangerous as a fission plant or antimatter.
Why would it should up? Besides, the only thing that's spinning is the plasma, which in total amounts to less than 20 kg at all time. So no spinning either. At worst you get a massive shrapnel cloud as the magnets tear themselves apart. Followed by a cloud of liquid helium evaporating.
Besides, worst case scenario is a coolant ignition(Primary coolant, not the secondary). The type used in Iter is highy explosive, and could result in an incident where most of the facility is lost. Radiation leak would be limited to the installations perimeter.
and, finally, there is such thing as a fusion-fission hybrid reactor. In fact, there are a few designs floating about in real life and i think one or two may have been built or are in the process of being built.))
I'm going to need a source here.
I want a nano-bomb. All of the nanobots, tearing whatever they find into little pieces and making more of themselves. How's this for a best case scenario; we make a doomsday weapon, we fight our way to the queen or something(most of us would die on the way, of course), and then we set it off. Antimatter bomb, nano-replicators, even just a virus that the Kai have no immunity to.
Repair gun is nanite based. Using them as weapon would be a very high class warcrime, and not that effective. After all, nanites can be destroyed with a microwave.