About defeating stealth technology:
As Russ_Watters pointed out, most contemporary stealth technology relies on absorption or deflection of oncoming EM radiation. Once countermeasure that was (quite unexpectedly) discovered was to use this very property to detect stealth aircraft.
A simple example: Say you have a source A and a receiver B. If a stealth aircraft flies in between them, the reception at B is temporarily cut off. But it isn't supposed to be (if all disturbances are accounted for). So you conclude that there is
something there, and at times of war (especially if you're facing the Americans ) the safe bet is that it is a stealth aircraft there.
Passive IR sensors for limited detection and/or tracking has already been discussed.
Another possibility is using roving detectors to continually search for stealth aircraft. Basically, stealth aircraft are not equally stealthy in all directions. The flight path of stealth aircraft often has to be meticulously planned to ensure that the radar cross section to known radar stations is always minimised. One option to this effect is AWACS-type planes. Another would be Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV's) which loiter over an area with a random flight path and continously search for targets. UAV's are already routinely used for reconnaisance missions, although of a typically different sort.
Another possibility is to use focused beams to detect stealth aircraft, effectively 'boosting' the power of the radar by simply increasing its focus. Basically, you can increase the W/area by increasing the focus. A poor man's equivalent of a powerful radar. While their obvious disadvantage would be a tiny sweep area, most stealth aircraft are slow and unmanoeuverable. Rapidly sweeping the skies and/or pulsing the beam may solve this shortcoming.
Human eye, Mark I. Stealth aircraft may be (at times) invisible to radar, but they can still be spotted. That is why stealth missions are restricted to the night, when the black coat blends in with the sky. For various reasons, a white or sky-blue painted aircraft is still partially visible to observers during the day. Work is currently underway in developing actual "shiny" aircraft (complete with light kits!) to blend into the daylight sky better. Successful implementation on stealth aircraft will enable them to fly both day and night operations.
Originally posted by S = k log w
Would a stealth plane lower it's detection vulnability by deployment of (projectile weaponry) from the top of the plane (with respect to ground) so that weapons doors are less likely to be detected? Also would the radar profile of a projectile weapon be less if that weapon was fired, for example, a missle, 'up' in relation to the ground bsed radar antenna? Could, in theory, a radar signal be not absorbed, but rather dispersed, and a transmitter on the plane send a signal to the ground that would be shaped/pulsed to make the ground based radar appear as if the stealth plane were not there?
The reason why planes tend to drop-deploy their weapons is because, like all things, sometimes mistakes happen. Missiles on aircraft pylons, for example, typically have separator charges which go off to separate the weapon from the plane before the rocket motor engages. If you get poor separation (perhaps because of a dud charge) it is not such a big deal. But if you mount it over the top of the aircraft, the last thing you want is (literally) a live weapon going *clunk* on your head!
Basically, a radar will say "nothing's there" if it gets no return signal, or a known return signal (if there are known obstructions in the area). But to address the question, such a setup will require very good sensors, a very fast computer and accurate transmitters. Is it really worth it?