A nuclear salt-water rocket maybe? I have occasional suspicious that it was created to make nuclear pulse propulsion look like a sane option.
I think this could actually be cleaner, in terms of total radioactive waste released per unit impulse, than the fission product rocket. The extremely high I
sp of the fission product rocket requires an extremely high ratio of reactor power to thrust, and the fission waste production rate scales directly with reactor power.
The nuclear salt-water rocket has a much lower I
sp (though still extremely high compared to chemical and even nuclear thermal rockets) so its ratio of reactor power to thrust is much lower. This means less ejected fission waste per unit impulse.
On the other hand, lower I
sp requires a greater propellant mass for the same impulse, which means more impulse is required just to move the extra unused propellant, which would increase total waste output. You'd have to compare the figures for a given total mission impulse requirement.
Is
Orion so bad compared to either of these? In each case you release all the byproducts of a nuclear reaction, and while the fission product rocket and the nuclear salt-water rocket both attain 100% of their energy from fission, Orion at least makes it possible to generate a good fraction of that from fusion. (Note that most so-called "hydrogen" bombs still generate most of their yield from fission; bombs for Orion would have to maximize their fusion/fission ratios.)
OTOH, the extremely high peak temperatures in a thermonuclear detonation mean that Orion would generate extremely bright pulses of X and far UV radiation not associated with the other two methods. These pulses might cause problems, e.g., unwanted ionization of the upper atmospheres of nearby planets, damage to solar arrays and sensitive astronomical sensors in spacecraft, etc.