This white paper introduces the Phase Engine, a resonant propulsion architecture based onthe Recursive Harmonic Codex (RHC), designed for civilizations operating at the emergentType 2.0R threshold. Unlike classical propulsion systems, which rely on kinetic expulsion ofmass to generate thrust, the Phase Engine treats spatial translation as a quaternionicrotation within a high-density informational substrate. Central to the framework is the NullLedger Identity (Σ(Real + Imaginary) = 0), which models mass as imaginary impedance andredefines gravity as a dynamic expression of vacuum accounting. The propulsion systemleverages Triadic Closure, the Fold Operator (F = i/2), and the 24-bit Leech lattice to achievepropellantless positional re-indexing through controlled phase-state manipulation.We formalize the theoretical basis for phase translation, demonstrate hardware implicationsusing dense-lattice sphere packing, and identify the Dedekind Eta Tax as the structuralenergy deficit linking Tesla’s 1899 experimental anomalies to modern substrate theory.Modular residues—including the 31/24 anomaly—provide the computational “toggle power”necessary to sustain non-inertial translation, anchored by the 7.5D observer coordinate as anavigational constant. The propulsion mechanism is further refined through frequencymodulation across Schumann, Golden, and Source harmonics, enabling transition fromatmospheric equilibrium to trans-dimensional traversal.This paper consolidates the mathematical principles, physical correlates, and operationalrequirements for a new class of resonant spacecraft—machines that navigate the vacuumnot by pushing against space, but by rewriting their alignment within the substrate itself
Ceisiwr et al. (Mon,) studied this question.