The solar system is so humongous big.

Khadi is the sun of the village solar system.

The solar system has no anxiety about its reputation.

It's time for the human race to enter the solar system.

Saturn is the most photogenic planet in the solar system.

The solar system is off center and consequently man is too.

Khadi will be the sun of the whole industrial solar system.

The gas-giant planets in our solar system all have large moons.

It's possible to gather light that's older than our solar system.

Most of the oceans in the Solar System are deep beneath ice shelves.

We've explored every type of environment in the solar system at least once.

I felt like I might as well have been living in another part of the solar system.

Before 1995, the only planets we knew about were the planets in our solar system.

We're going to understand that there is life on other bodies in the solar system.

Pluto and its brethren are the most populous class of planets in our solar system.

I think we have a good chance of surviving long enough to colonize the solar system.

The geysering on Enceladus is the most astonishing phenomenon we have in our solar system.

Going to the Kuiper Belt is like an archaeological dig into the history of the solar system.

The solar system is completely wide open. Almost anywhere we go, I'm sure we would learn a lot.

Anybody with any sense knows the whole solar system will go up like a celluloid collar by-and-by.

I've always been fascinated with science and exploring our world, from microbes to the solar system.

Mars is the only place in the solar system where it's possible for life to become multi-planetarian.

If we knew exactly what to expect throughout the Solar System, we would have no reason to explore it.

I think Pluto has to be considered among the places in the solar system that are possible homes for life.

The solar system can support a trillion humans. And then we'd have a thousand Mozarts and a thousand Einsteins.

The public has an incredible capacity for appreciating the wonder of our planet, our solar system, our universe.

Man must at all costs overcome the Earth's gravity and have, in reserve, the space at least of the Solar System.

The solar system should be viewed as our backyard, not as some sequence of destinations that we do one at a time.

What I want to look at with Webb is what we call ice giants in our solar system - the planets Neptune and Uranus.

I hope that by 2050 the entire solar system will have been explored and mapped by flotillas of tiny robotic craft.

In the long term, space resources could lead to a thriving new space economy and human expansion into the solar system.

Just think: in all the clean, beautiful reaches of the solar system, our planet alone is a blot; our planet alone has death.

Pluto is showing us a diversity of landforms and complexity of processes that rival anything we've seen in the solar system.

We go to learn about our solar system, to search for life, and to understand what happened to Mars so we avoid it ourselves.

We should be ready to reach out beyond our planet and beyond our solar system to find out what is really going on out there.

We're in the space exploration business, and the outer solar system is a wild, wooly place. We haven't explored it very well.

There's life all over this universe, but the only life in the solar system is on earth, and in the whole universe we are the only men.

No other planet in the solar system is a suitable home for human beings; it's this world or nothing. That's a very powerful perception.

When you look at the stars and the galaxy, you feel that you are not just from any particular piece of land, but from the solar system.

The Moon and Mars were the two most likely candidates for life in the solar system; what exists beyond our solar system is mere guesswork.

If you're creating a whole universe, even if it's a universe squeezed into a solar system, you have to use a little bit of sleight of hand.

There's an idea that London is a planet on its own: that it's starting to diverge from the rest of the solar system. We need to combat that.

Obviously I'd like NASA to follow their charter - the exploration of our solar system and beyond. I'd like to see people someday go to Mars.

Our solar system is actually a wild frontier, teeming with different, diverse places: planets and moons, millions of objects of ice and rock.

As our sensitivity improves, we are finally seeing planets with longer orbital periods, planetary systems that look more like our solar system.

It is more likely that more than a century will pass before we know the structure of the chemical atoms as thoroughly as we do our solar system.

Most of the solar system resides beyond the orbits of the asteroids. There is more to learn there about general planetary processes than on Mars.

While the circumnavigation of the solar system seems farfetched, it may not be once the problem of effective anti-gravitational control is solved.

It is time to declare that the goal of the United States in space is the settlement of the solar system, from low Earth orbit to the Moon and Mars.

What we're learning is that the sun and its warmth isn't the only way to get warmth in the solar system, and we've been thinking that for some time.

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