B-trees. Every index is stored as a B-tree -- even composite ones.
If you're looking to do more research on how indexes are organized, look into B+ trees and B* trees. For SQL Server, Kalen Delaney's Inside SQL Server: The Storage Engine is an excellent book about the nuts and bolts of SQL Server, including its index organization. So you should definitely check that out.
A commenter points out that Oracle can use bitmap indexes, which are structured very differently than B-trees, but those are rarely used for traditional relational databases -- they're used more often for OLAP type applications and in cases where you need fast access on a nonselective group of data.
EDIT: SQL Server, for example, now uses Columnstore Indexes. If you do any work with large BI type workloads, it's definitely worth looking at these, as they store your data in an entirely different way than a B-Tree.
SQL Server also uses a different mechanism now for memory optimized tables as well, and is something that's very useful for OLTP type queries.