You should ask that of the Chinese members here. They are the ones making outrageous claims.
Please do not try to pass yourself off as someone with credibility. You first claimed to have 'aviation experience' to try to shut down the Indians, then when challenged, you backtracked to 'aviation study', then when challenged further as to which discipline since aviation have many disciplines, you ran. Essentially, you are a liar, a pretender, a fraud.
But in being generous, I will school you...
In intention of RCS control, which includes RCS reduction of an existing design or designing for RCS consideration from the start, it is necessary to control...
1- Quantity of radiators.
2 - Modes of radiation.
3- Array of radiators.
The two boxes above illustrate the three rules nicely. Rules, not merely guidelines or suggestions, if the intention is to take RCS into consideration. The Sopwith Camel, the P-51, or the F-16 did not have RCS as consideration so the three rules do not apply. But the F-117, F-22, F-35, B-2, PAK, and now allegedly the J-20, have RCS as consideration so the three rules absolutely applies.
Each box have a fixed quantity of radiators and the same array of radiators. But box 2 (right) obeyed rule 2, which is to control the modes of radiation. Contrary to what Stupidboy said about the canards being the same as the tailplanes, just as canards affects aerodynamics differently than tailplanes, canards falls under all three rules and being
WHERE they are, rule 3 applies so the RCS signature of the body with canards will be different from the body with the tailplanes even though two bodies may have the same quantity of radiators -- rule 1.
Different does not automatically equal to either higher or lower. Only Measurement can tell us. But experience have already hinted that with current technology, canards, as per rule 3,
TENDS to increase total RCS per rule 2. SinusSoldered said that the canards being on the same plane as the wings and therefore would have no effects on RCS. It is a baseless declaration as each canard is a finite body and with any finite body, rule 2 applies.
When we -- on this forum -- see at least a couple of reputable sources that says a stationary body is effectively invisible to radar, then we can toss out the three rules and I will be the first in line to do so.