Oh, cool!
I found answers for my 1G acceleration speed. See
here.
To pull relevant portions:
The time for the trip with 1G accel is 3.6 years on-board the ship.
The fuel needed is 38kg per kg of payload (assuming 100% efficiency, all matter to energy). That's a signifigant amount of energy. Using E=mc
2 it works out like so:
E=(38kg)*(300,000,000m/s)*(300,000,000m/s)
E=3,420,000,000,000,000,000kgm
2/s
2 with is Joules
So, that's 3,420 TJ of energy, per kg of rocket. That means that 1/11th of our ship is actual equipment, the rest fuel. So our payload is about 825 kg. THat means we need 2,821,500 TJ of energy.
From
here the annual energy production in the U.S. runs about 72.9 Quadrillion BTUs. That works out to 76,909,500,000,000,000,000 J, or 76,909,500 TJ.
So, that means we'd need about 3.6% of the energy produced by the U.S. to send four people to the next closest star. This also assumes a 100% matter-to-energy conversion fueling the process. The closest we could get to that would be matter-antimatter but even then some energy is lost in conversion. MOre relistically, I'd say we could get, at best, 50% from a matter/antimatter thermal system. That means about 7.2% of the U.S. energy production for one year.