A probe mission is usually a one way trip so using an expensive drive on a probe would only be worth it for longer missions. An earth/moon transporter is not a use-once-throw-away ship so if there is enough demand for earth/moon transfers then yes for 10 billion dollars the thing would be built.
If you just look at the estimated constellation program costs an earth/moon transfer ship that gets 900tons of payload (or maybe just 500-700 accounting for ship mass) to the moon within 24 hours with just 1000tons of drive mass (H2 or even Water would do) for just 10 billion dollars would be something they would be VERY happy to build.
The point is that this would be a craft much more suited to flying long distance missions - like a grand tour of the solar system or even on a voyage to other stars. A single high thrust burst of low Isp propellant will not do it, or will do it only if certain geometry conditions are met - as they were for the Voyager mission. If a low Isp, high thrust propulsion system would get the job done, believe me, we'd be on Mars by now.
The burntime is not 3 days but 2.78 hours for the proposal in my post above. You don't need to spiral out with that acceleration..
Three hours, sorry.
But still you have to spread the burn through several orbits before you get ejected.
But oh well if thats not working take 400kg/s massflow. Then you have only ~5000m/s total deltav but 1.4 m/s^2 acceleration so that would be ~41 minutes total burntime, thats roughly a half orbit in LEO so definately no spiraling there.
Yea, unless you wanna burn for one third of the orbit, you're gonna have to split your burn over several orbits.
Ok then lets take the Saturn example. Saturn is how far, 8-9 AU ? For simplicity lets take 10AU and calculate how long it would take us to go half the way with constant acceleration for the 3 different setups proposed:
5 AU are roughly 750e9 m
Given the acceleration we can calculate the time it takes to fly the leg as
Assuming you fly in a straight line from Earth to Saturn and that the Sun doesn't exist to pull you in. With that, the error is such that the following calculation is worthless.
Furthermore...
Finally we have the setup with 2000tons with 100ton reactor and 1000ton drive mass:
i figured out an optimal mass flow of 51.7g/s for this mission so lets see..
exhaust velocity
v = sqrt(10GW * 2 / 0.0517kg/s) = 621970 m/s
thrust
F = v * 0.0517kg/s = 32156N
acceleration
a = 32156N / 2000000kg = 0.0161 m/s^2
t = sqrt(750e9m * 2 / 0.0161 m/s^2) = 9652342s =~ 112days
at the fuel massflow of 0.0517kg/s we use
0.0517kg/s * 9652342s = 499026kg of fuel to go the 5AU so half of the fuel on board.. as already noted if we had used the rocket equation here things would even look better for this setup as the acceleration would double towards the end of the mission.
You're using an "optimal" mass flow of ~50 g/s, which will, of course, provide much better results then your suggested 100 kg/s.
For this simple calculation, using a mass flow of ~50 g/s is roughly in between 100 kg/s and 0.0284 g/s, however, your oversimplification doesn't do it justice, because a real voyage between Earth and Saturn would not follow a straight line. In fact, you need roughly 7 km/s of Delta-V for a most efficient transfer, without slinging around other planets.
Obviously a real journey would use an optimized mass flow for shortest transfer, but it would be far closer to 0.03 g/s then to 100 kg/s, which was my original point. You'd probably produce enough thrust just by cooling the reactor.
There is one more aspect to adding mass that you should take into account:
Whatever the substance you're going to add, be it water or hydrogen, will drain certain amount of power, just by introducing mass. The reason is that you'll need to overcome the binding energy, holding the molecules together and the binding energy, holding electrons within the molecule. The inefficiency will increase with the added mass flow, effectively reducing the power output of the reactor.
If I have some spare time, I'll write you the complete calculation taking into account the orbit around the Sun, the distance of the voyage, optimal mass, fuel flow and so on.