Analysis of the Effect of Tilted Corner Cube Reflector Arrays on Lunar Laser Ranging
Jin Cao (1,2,3), Rufeng Tang (1), Kai Huang (1,3), Zhulian Li (1),, Yongzhang Yang (1), Kai Huang (2), Jintao Li (1), Yuqiang Li (1) ((1), Yunnan Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming, China, (2), College of Mathematics, Physics, Leshan Normal University, Leshan

TL;DR
This paper investigates how tilting of corner cube reflector arrays affects lunar laser ranging accuracy, proposing a model and experimental validation to improve single-shot precision by extracting specific echo peaks.
Contribution
It introduces a mathematical model and experimental methods to reduce tilt-induced errors in lunar laser ranging, enhancing measurement precision and data volume.
Findings
Single-shot precision improved from 32.24 mm to 2.52 mm with signal extraction.
Echo signals can identify CCR tilt states, enabling error reduction.
The approach provides a reference for future ground-based laser ranging upgrades.
Abstract
This paper primarily investigates the effect of the tilt of corner cube reflector (CCR) arrays on lunar laser ranging (LLR). A mathematical model was established to study the random errors caused by the tilt of the CCR arrays. The study found that, ideally, when the laser ranging pulse width is 10 picoseconds or less, it is possible to distinguish from which specific corner cubes within the CCR array each peak in the echo signal originates. Consequently, partial data from the echo can be extracted for signal processing, significantly reducing random errors and improving the single-shot precision of LLR. The distance obtained by extracting part of the echo can be reduced to the center position of the array, thereby providing multiple higher-precision ranging results from each measurement. This not only improves the precision of LLR but also increases the data volume. A simulation…
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