We introduce a minimal and operational framework for testing gradient-dependent contributions to gravitational redshift. The approach distinguishes between a Reference Neutral Baseline (RNB), corresponding to standard general relativity, and an Activated Reference Neutral Baseline (ARNB), in which additional effects arise from local structure. Within this framework, deviations from the standard prediction are parameterized by a coupling to local energy density gradients. A key experimental signature is a sign reversal of the observable under inversion of the gradient, providing a robust criterion to distinguish physical effects from systematic contributions. We show that these regimes can be consistently embedded in a minimal space-field description, referred to as PulsumSpace, in which local deviations from a neutral configuration lead to measurable modifications of clock rates. Such effects would indicate that clock rates depend not only on gravitational potential but also on local structural properties of the space field. This formulation provides a compact and testable basis for null-test experiments probing possible extensions of gravitational redshift beyond general relativity.
Remzi Öztürk (Mon,) studied this question.