
Monopole antenna used for broadcasting
A 'monopole antenna' is a type of
radio antenna formed by replacing one half of a
dipole antenna with a
ground plane at right-angles to the remaining half. If the ground plane is large enough, the monopole behaves exactly like a dipole, as if its reflection in the ground plane formed the missing half of the dipole (see
image antenna).
When used for radio broadcasting, the radio frequency power from the broadcasting transmitter is fed across the base insulator between the tower and a ground system. The ideal ground system for a. m. broadcasters comprises 120 buried
copper or
phosphor bronze radial wires at least one-quarter wavelength long and a ground-screen in the immediate vicinity of the tower. All the ground system components are bonded together, usually by
brazing or using
coin silver solder to help reduce corrosion. Monopole antennas that use guy wires for support are called masts in some countries. In the United States, the term “mast” is not generally used to relate to antennas, so both self-supporting and guyed radio antennas are simply called monopoles if they stand alone. If used in numbers to control the direction of radio frequency propagation, they are called
directional antenna arrays.
The radio frequency
impedance across this antenna base insulator is well defined and is approximately as shown in the chart.

Approximate feed-point impedance
In the United States, the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) requires that the transmitter power input to the antenna be measured and maintained. The power input is calculated as the square of the measured current flowing into the antenna from the transmission line multiplied by the real part of the antenna's feed-point impedance.
:
This impedance is periodically measured to verify the stability of the antenna and ground system. Normally a tuning network matches the antenna impedance to the impedance of the
transmission line feeding this device.
Examples of monopole antennas are:
★ the
whip antenna
★ the
radio mast - when isolated from the ground and bottom-fed
See also
★
Cellular repeater
★
Signal strength
★
Directional antenna
★
Folded unipole antenna