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How does opening airplane bay doors (especially in the case of bombers), increase the radar cross section of the airplane and make it more visible to the radar?

These are usually combined with active measures such as carefully planning all mission maneuvers in order to minimize the aircraft's radar cross section, since common actions such as hard turns or opening bomb bay doors can more than double an otherwise stealthy aircraft's radar return

Source

DeltaLima
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Victor Juliet
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    This is too broad: What type of bay doors? How big and how do they open? How high does the aircraft fly? Is it pitching or banking to any direction? How close to the radar installation(s) is it flying? Is the radar monostatic, bistatic or multystatic?

    Generally, determining the RCS of a target and the factors that can affect it, is not an easy task.

    – Stelios Adamantidis Jul 14 '15 at 10:13
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  • Bay doors used for dropping bombs by bombers
  • How Big? Consider any normal modern bomber
  • How high? I have not mentioned that because of the fact that wiki article mentions increase in radar cross section without mentioning altitude (and thats why planes use very high altitude to avoid detection)
  • – Victor Juliet Jul 14 '15 at 11:22
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    Your comment reference a Wiki article, yet your question does not. If you want people to take that article into consideration when answering the question, you may want to provide a link and mention the bits you feel are relevant. – FreeMan Jul 14 '15 at 13:09
  • Included the source :) – Victor Juliet Jul 14 '15 at 13:20