Don't quite get it. In the description of antimatter storage you say that it can store 10 grams.
The point is that unlike ordinary fuel, where you take 10 grams of whatever substance or combination of substances, cause it to release a bunch of energy, and then get 10 grams (minus some vanishingly small amount) of matter flying out the back of the craft, when you annihilate 10 grams of antimatter with 10 grams of matter you get (assuming perfect efficiency) 0 grams of matter left to fly out the back.
In game mechanics it stores 1000 points, so you can easily calculate the mass of 1 point. But even if we increase that number, we'll need to increase it drastically, up to 1000 times at least, to make it look anywhere close to reality in respect to the linear momentum. But after that there will be a question: how can we miss something like this on our radars. The amount of energy released will be more than enough to boil the oceans, and should be seen by every single radar on earth surface.
So I'd realized, between my first and second edits, that the photons would have momentum and that I don't think there's anything that would make conservation of momentum not apply in this case (meaning that I think 10 grams leaving the ship at the speed of light is a reasonable rough approximation—it'd actually probably have to be half that, as the net momentum of the annihilating particles would probably be quite low meaning that for some amount of momentum's worth of photons to go bounce against the ship, propelling it forward, an equal amount of momentum's worth of photons needs to simply fly out the back without providing any thrust). The thing is, though, that all you need to do to improve the amount of momentum generated is to pitch some additional matter into the annihilation chamber so that it flies out the back of the ship as a result of the energy from the annihilation. I'm too lazy for precise calculations at the moment.
Edit: a very important caveat! I'm assuming that the annihilation produces no non-massless particles (and am also, less significantly, assuming that they only produce photons). I think this is highly likely, as I can't think of a good reason to encourage massed particle formation, but I am reminded that this is not in fact a guaranteed feature of annihilation.
Though unfortunately, that IS what the UFOpedia currently says (using the explosive force):
It uses direct matter-antimatter annihilation to generate thrust by injecting protons and antiprotons into the reaction chamber, then channeling this explosive force out the back of the engine.
so...
Well, yes, the UFOpedia currently says a lot of dumb things (witness the pistols firing rifle-caliber rounds and the assault rifle/machine gun firing teensy little ones). I guess my point is that fixing it is simply a matter of adding a reference to reaction mass, rather than fundamentally rethinking the mechanism.
:facepalm: Guys, what are you writing? Newtonian physics does not apply to annihilation drive, since it violates the key axiom of Newtonian physics -- the law of mass conservation. You should use the relativistic energy-impulse conservation law instead.
This is an irrelevant objection—it's true that the conservation of momentum being followed isn't strictly Newton's third law, but momentum is still conserved. The fact that some of this momentum cannot be accounted for by multiplying velocity and rest mass is of only pedagogical importance.
~J