By 2055, Aleksandra had co-founded , a company pioneering low-orbit satellites capable of hosting zero-gravity installations. Yet, she felt unfulfilled. “Technology without art is a machine without a soul,” she declared to her team during a brainstorming session. The idea struck her: a concert in the vacuum of space, where sound vibrations would ripple through magnetic fields and ionized air, creating a symphony unseen and unheard on Earth. The Challenge: Building a Dream in the Void Securing funding was a hurdle. Investors dismissed StarSessions as a “sci-fi fantasy,” while skeptics warned of the logistical nightmares. Aleksandra’s closest friend and mentor, Dr. Elias Park, a former NASA engineer, cautioned: “You’re asking to conduct a symphony in a place where even a note might scatter into silence.” Undeterred, Aleksandra leveraged her KovaTech profits and partnered with the Martian Colonization Initiative (MCI) to repurpose a dormant space habitat near Mars’ Deimos as the first venue.