Based on a fully passive space segment, the lunar laser ranging experiment is the last of the Apollo Lunar Surface Experiments Package to operate. Observations from the Grasse lunar laser ranging station have been made on a daily basis since the first echoes obtained in 1981. In this paper, first, we review the principle and the technical aspects of lunar laser ranging. We then give a brief summary of the progress made at the Grasse laser ranging facility (Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur, Calern Plateau on the French Riviera) since the first echoes. The current performance, driven by the use of an infrared wavelength laser, is presented in the last section for the year 2018.
Downlink measurement campaigns from the optical downlink terminal OSIRISv1 onboard the LEO satellite Flying Laptop were carried out with the French Observatoire de la Côte d’Azur and with two Optical Ground Stations of the German Aerospace Center. On/off keyed data at 39 Mb/s were modulated on the laser signal, and according telecom reception was performed by the ground stations. The pointing of the laser terminal was achieved by open-loop body pointing of the satellite orientation, with its star sensor as attitude control signal. We report here on the measurements and investigations of the downlink signal and the data transmission.
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