Well there are a few ways:
1. Using telescopes and other sensory devices from Earth, or Near Earth Orbit.
2. Sending robotic probes around the solar system to gather information.
3. Physically sending humans in a spacecraft.
Of these, the third is the most expensive, which is why it hasn't been attempted beyond the moon. The other two are comparitively far cheaper and are readily used today to gather information about out solar system.
by using a pumped up remote control and a camera
Earth
Voyager 1 and Voyager 2. There is a matter of some debate as to whether the two Voyager probes have actually left the solar system, an where the "edge" of the solar system actually is. Both are beyond the orbit of Pluto, but have not passed beyond the vaguely-defined Kuiper Belt, and the two probes are just approaching the heliopause, the boundary layer between the solar wind and the broader currents of interstellar space. But it seems likely that however that boundary is defined, the two Voyager probes either were or will be the first man-made objects to pass it.
Francisco Vásquez de Coronado.
The think system is if you think about the melody and you hum the melody, when you are presented with an instrument, you will be able to play the melody.
It created a system of punishment equal to the crime, such as, if a man breaks another man bone his bone shall be broken or if a man robbes another man and is caught he shall be killed
who explored the solar system
The solar system is natural.
There are 9 planets in our solar system, which is the Milkey way Galexy.
THE "SOLAR SYSTEM" - is composed of the sun and all the bodies that revolve around it!!!!There are man kind of the solar system's of the following:planets moonsasteroidsmeteorscometsBY:NAIF
If we are talking about being off the Earth and in the solar system Yuri Gagarin.
Robots aren't advanced enough yet but we do use probes, Man will do more when we perfect a faster mode of intersteller travel.
Man loves to explore, so almost any unexplored location is intriguing. But, Mars is particularly interesting because of the planets in our solar system Mars is the most like Earth. It had/has similar temperatures and it one had surface water. These facts make it the most likely to have had life of some kind.
Earth
well r solar system is not a man made structure its just not its not created by clouds or anything its created by god and we have a solar system cuz well we just do.
None. By definition , our "solar system" is everything controlled by the gravity of our sun. The planets, their satellites, asteroids, dwarf planets, comets, interplanetary dust, and man-made satellites are "within" our solar system. Any "planet" outside out solar system is just that - OUTSIDE of it.
Nothing man-made has left our solar system yet. The furthest thing is Voyager 1, which is now about 116AU away from Earth, around 10.8 billion miles - at the edge of our solar system.
Good questoin probaly by the man on the moon lol