henk21cm wrote:It is not my intention to be rude, but the phrase "It is simple to see" is synonymous with "the author did not bother to elaborate, after three weeks of intensive calculations the result can be found".
I simply meant that if you made a simple drawing of the 2D case, it should become pretty clear how a retroreflector works. But I can do that:
I've drawn two rays, and you can see that each exits at the same angle it enters, because at each reflection the entry and exit angle is the same. In general, for a ray that strikes the first surface at an angle
theta with respect to that surface, it reflects at angle
theta from that surface. It strikes the next surface at angle
90 - theta, and therefore reflects at angle
90 - theta. Since the second surface is rotated 90° with respect to the first, the total reflection angle is
180 - theta; that is, a 180° reflection.
By the way, Snellius law is involved, since a retroreflector has a boundary between the material it is made of and the vacuum between earth and moon.
That's
Snell's Law, not
Snellius (in spite of the fact that it's named after Snellius). And you don't need to use it. Retroreflectors made as mirrors have no boundary between different indexes of refraction, so the law doesn't apply. Retroreflectors made as prisms do show refraction, but if you apply Snell's law you'll see that the entrance and exit refraction cancel out, so again you can just consider the system as reflective.
Using IR one might be able to excite the rotational bands of CO2. Lets send out a pulse of light. It travels through roughly 60 km of atmosphere. Reflection is likely proportional to the atmospheric pressure (the more atoms, the more reflection). So during the first 0.4 ms a sharply decreasing reflection pulse is recorded. Assuming that the probability per atom for reflection is constant, it is possible to derive some sort of distribution for the pressure. Assuming that the speed of light as function of pressure is known, from the reflection curve during the first 0.4 ms the extra time delay (with respect to vacuum) can be deduced. Is that what you mean?
That might be one approach. The method I was referring to depends on the knowledge of the height that the fluorescent species is found, and looking at the time of flight. I'm sure there are many methods that can be used for characterizing the atmosphere, assuming it is actually necessary for lunar ranging.