IMHO, there is no actual RT Linux1. There are only approaches of adding RT compatibily features² to the official genereal purpose Linux kernel. Examples are RTAI, Xenomai or the PREEMPT_RT patch. Thus, they're all using the same kernel which is definitely a monolithic kernel (and as for Linus this will pretty sure stay this way).
However, a paper³ by Jae Hwan Koh and Byoung Wook Cho about RTAI and Xenomai performance evaluation puts it like this (which indeed sounds more like a separate kernel approach):
RTAI and Xenomai are interfaces for real-time tasks rather than real-time operating systems. Therefore, an OS is needed to use them; Linux is most widely used. In RTAI and Xenomai, the Linux OS kernel is treated as an idle task, and it only executes when there are no real-time tasks to run. The figure below shows the architectures and versions of the real-time embedded Linux used [here]. RTAI and Xenomai are conceptually homogeneous, and they both use a general-purpose Linux kernel and real-time API. However, there is a remarkable contrast.. [in way they handle certain things].
Another picture that if found⁴ supports this point-of-view as well, i.e. having a kernel running on-top of another one as idle task.
1 Having said that, there used to be a OS (kernel) named RTLinux which was working quite similar like the other approaches mentioned in my answer above, ie it runs the entire Linux kernel as a fully preemptive process [1] [2]. RTLinux later merged into the products of Wind River (VxWorks) and did also influenced the work around RTAI. Couldn't find a source about the kernel type.
2 in other words a "real-time extension"
3 "Real-time Performance of Real-time Mechanisms for RTAI and Xenomai in Various Running Conditions", 2013, International Journal of Control and Automation
4 unfortunately I could not determine its source yet.