plawolf
Lieutenant General
but aren't the ventral fins aligned with the contralateral fuselage and dorsal fin?
reflections from the ventral fins should go in the same direction as that from the contralateral fuselage?
and about the single flat surface, my impression is that it reflects radiation pretty well, just in an easier to control direction... you would still need to know the position of opposition radar emitters and receivers for you to achieve effective "stealth"
does the j20 ventral fin add an extra direction of radar reflection compared with its fuselage?
Great points.
But it's actually more than that. By canting the vertical stabiliser and ventral fins, what they hope to do is reflect as much as possible incoming radar energy onto the main wings rather than into a random direction so long as it's not right back at the radar emitter.
The main wing will absorb a great deal of he radar energy, and reflect what is left away from the waiting receiver.
That is why the non-canted vertical tails on the F22 and F35 are actually much more risky with ground based radars compared to the J20's canted ventricle fins.
With regards to the J20's ventrical fins aligning with the opposite fuselage, well that's an astute observation, but it's actually more complicated than just mere redirecting (which is what the F117 was all about, but again, I don't see the J20 bashing crowd picking any bones with the sheer number of surfaces and directions the F117 would have been reflecting radar energy in). Modern stealth fighters are only possible thanks to continuos curvature calculations the Russians foolishly published in open source internal science journals.
I would expect most of he J20 to use CC rules, so it's main fuselage may reflect very differently compared to a canted flat surface.