Probably not directly on topic... but worth keeping in mind...
The way LLR works is fundamentally misunderstood, especally by Hoax Nutcases like Hunchback and the Blunder. Its is usually described as..."they fire a laser at the corner reflectors on the moon and then see how long it takes to come back and the time delay allows them to work out the distance". This is the grade school explanation... reality is far more complicated.
The signal we receive on the earth from the laser beam that has reflected from those corner reflectors is so weak that it is all but undetectable. Only one photon in 3x107 photons we fire at the moon actually strikes the LLR reflector, and of all the photons that do get reflected, only one in every 3x107 of those strike the detector here in Earth....that works out to not very many received reflected photons. The laser sends micro-pulses of laser light, 100 picoseconds long (one ten-billionth of a second) at a frequency of about 20 PPS. Only 1–5 return photons per pulse are detected.
The only reason they are able to detect the signal at all is because the light from the laser is monochromatic, but its not just a matter of looking for these photons and timing their arrival. The pulses are about 2cm deep, and even when detected, there is no way to determine where in the pulse the detected photon is - the leading edge, the trailing edge or somewhere in between.
Now, there have been many improvements over the 50 years LLR has been in operation, but how this was explained to me is as follows:
The detector (which is essentially something like a highly sophisticated photon counter) only looks for the signal very close to the time it is expected to return - it counts the total number of photons in a given time window, and compares them with a window immediately before and immediately after the expected arrival time. These measurements are integrated over a period of time, until eventually, a detectable increase in the number of photons inside the window, compared with outside the window, means the reflected laser beam has been detected, and the more photons are detected, the better the accuracy of the measurement (Nerror~√N) - I'm sure someone will correct me if I have that last part wrong.