However, since it's whatever advanced variant of rockets that's under the scope, and as far as I know the fuel is hydrogen that needs heating up, I suspect you'd need some form of energy to ignite that to an efficient form, which I assume is plasma.
You only need energy.
The energy for a Photon Thermal Drive is external to the craft being propelled.
The energy is photons/EM radiation sent from a ground station or satellite and "beamed" to the craft (probably by laser or equivalent) ... hence photons.
Onboard the craft, that energy is received and converted into thermal heating of the H
2 fuel supply onboard. It's not chemical combustion, it's simple/plain thermal heating of the H
2 using the energy input from the ground station/satellite. The heated H
2 is exhausted as rocket propulsion after being heated.
Because there is no need for an oxidizer to combust the fuel, you need a LOT LESS mass onboard the craft in order to make this setup work. You essentially "offshore" the energy source needed to make the whole thing work (and go) from the craft allowing the craft to be small and low mass, vastly improving the Rocket Equation relative to a conventional chemical rocket.
If it helps, think of it as being the high tech equivalent of a crystal radio set ... except done for rocket propulsion instead of communications.
- The crystal set makes the sounds you hear, but the power to make it "go" comes from the radio tower broadcasting signal.
- The H2 onboard creates thrust in a vacuum, but the power to make it "go" comes from the ground station/satellite beaming photons out to the craft.
Watch the linked video and this would be more than abundantly clear.
This shouldn't be
that difficult to figure out.
In space, even small accelerations can have very important implications to orbit/course/trajectory over longer time frames. It's only when you're "in a hurry" (and combat counts as one of those times) when you're going to want to have a LOT of acceleration over a short time frame, rather than a teeny tiny acceleration over a long time frame.