If you found that you could build two entirely different antennas that produce exactly the same radiation pattern when viewed from far away, would you consider these antennas equivalent? I would, as long as the intensity and polarization and rotation of the electric and magnetic fields were identical in any direction. You get this when you replace an ideal ground plane with the "reflected" image of the original antenna over the ground plane. This is because the reflection of energy off the ground plane just happens to be identical to the radiation from the image antenna.
I presume you already know the properties of the image. That is, that charge polarity is reversed relative to the real antenna, and that the vertical components of the image are the same as those of the real antenna while the horizontal components are reversed in direction.
The classic way to help understand this is to use ray tracing of energy radiating from a point radiator above ground (the simplest case). You usually see this example in text books. If you trace the reflected ray you see that it is in the same line as a ray that would radiate from the image point. These rays are equivalent.
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RadioRon
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