Yes.
In fact your eyes can see all the stars in our Solar System.
The only star in our solar system is the Sun.
They don't. They occasional observe the solar system, but all the interesting radio objects are extra solar.
All of the planets in our solar system, and all of the 'exoplanets' so far discoveredby the current Kepler telescope mission, are smaller than almost all stars.
You cannot see planets outside our solar system with the naked eye. And, only a rare few can be seen with the most powerful telescopes. Most are detected by way of indirect measurements -- by observing their effect on their suns (stars).
No, stars are not part of our solar system. Our solar system consists of the Sun and all the objects that orbit it, such as planets, moons, asteroids, and comets. Stars are separate celestial bodies that exist outside of our solar system.
No. The moon is in the solar system. The only star in the solar system is the sun. All other stars are much farther away than any object in the solar system.
There is only one star in our solar system-The Sun.
No. All the stars you see at night are in our galaxy, but outside of the solar system. The only star in our solar system is the one at its center: the sun.
No. All the stars at night that are actually stars are well beyond the solar system. Five "stars" that you sometimes see are actually planets in our solar system: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. The only actual star in our solar system is the sun.
There is only one star in our solar system; it is called The Sun.
There aren't other stars in the solar system. The only star in the solar system is the sun. The stars at night are well beyond the solar system. Even the closest are hundreds of thousands of times farther away than the sun.
The solar system is wonderful, it is all sorts of colours but there is a lot of black that is filled with stars.
The solar system definitely is, and most of the stars you see are as well. If you can see the Andromeda Nebula on a very dark clear night, that is a system of stars outside our galaxy.