The antenna is supported by a central steel tubular or
lattice mast. The top of the mast is attached to a ring of equally spaced radial wires extending diagonally to near the ground, where each is attached with a
strain insulator to a length of non-radiating wire or rope which is anchored to the ground. The umbrella wires may also serve structurally as
guy lines to support the mast. There are several different methods of feeding power from the
transmitter to the antenna: In base feed, the mast is supported on a thick ceramic
insulator which keeps it insulated from the ground, and the
feedline from the
transmitter is attached to the base of the mast. The conductive steel mast serves as the monopole radiator. Alternately, in high power antennas, the mast is grounded, the umbrella wires are insulated where they connect to the central mast, and are attached to vertical radiator wires that hang down parallel to the mast which are fed at the bottom. This construction is used in high power antennas in which the very high voltage on the antenna would make it difficult to insulate the mast from the ground. Under the antenna is a large
ground (Earthing) system connected to the opposite side of the feedline, consisting of wires buried in the Earth extending radially from a terminal at the base of the mast out to the edge of the umbrella wires. File:Tsushima Omega Tower 1977 2.jpg|
Omega navigation system antenna H, an obsolete
radio navigation system, Tsushima, Japan, 389 meters, built 1973. Transmitted on 10–14 kHz. File:Tuaran Sabah RTM-Antenna-Farm-01.jpg|Antenna of Radio Televisyen Malaysia (RTM),
Tuaran, Sabah district, Malaysia File:Antenne Oméga - Ile de la Réunion.png|
Omega Station E 428 meter antenna at Chabrier,
Réunion island. File:Woodside VLF Transmitter - top of mast.jpg|Top of 432 m mast of station G
Omega antenna, Victoria, Australia, showing insulators attaching the 16 umbrella wires to the mast Alternatively, in radial feed, the antenna can be fed power by applying the transmitter current to the ends of one or more of the radial wires instead of the mast. In this case the central mast is grounded. As with wire feeders, this avoids the need for a mast support insulator, and also does not require an isolator in the power cables for the mast's
aircraft warning lights. This construction was used in three large umbrella antennas for the obsolete
Omega navigation system which operated at 10–14
kHz, to eliminate the very difficult problem of insulating the mast base against the 200 kV antenna potential. Since the antenna is shorter than the resonant length of one-quarter wavelength, it has
capacitance. In order to cancel the
capacitive reactance and make it resonant so it can be fed power efficiently, an impedance matching
inductor called a
loading coil is connected in series with the feedline at the base of the antenna. == Operation ==