The loss of radio-frequency power to heat can be subdivided many different ways, depending on the number of significantly lossy objects electrically coupled to the antenna, and on the level of detail desired. Typically the simplest is to consider two types of loss:
ohmic loss and
ground loss. When discussed as distinct from
ground loss, the term
ohmic loss refers to the heat-producing resistance to the flow of radio current in the conductors of the antenna, their electrical connections, and possibly loss in the antenna's feed cable. Because of the
skin effect, resistance to radio-frequency current is generally much higher than direct current resistance. For
vertical monopoles and other antennas placed near the ground,
ground loss occurs due to the electrical resistance encountered by radio-frequency fields and currents passing through the soil in the vicinity of the antenna, as well as ohmic
resistance in metal objects in the antenna's surroundings (such as its mast or stalk), and
ohmic resistance in its ground plane / counterpoise, and in electrical and mechanical bonding connections. When considering antennas that are mounted a few wavelengths above the earth on a non-conducting, radio-transparent mast, ground losses are small enough compared to conductor losses that they can be ignored. ==Footnotes==