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Locations in the Solar System besides the Earth have appeared as settings in fiction since at least classical antiquity, initially as an extension of the established literary form of the imaginary voyage to exotic locations ostensibly on Earth. The motif then largely fell out of use for over a millennium and did not become commonplace again until the 1600s with the Copernican Revolution. For most of literary history the principal extraterrestrial location was the Moon; in the late 1800s, advances in astronomy led to Mars becoming more popular. The discovery of Uranus in 1781 and Neptune in 1846, as well the first asteroids in the early 1800s, had little immediate impact on fiction. The main theme has been visits by humans to the Moon or one of the planets, where they would often find native lifeforms. Alien societies commonly serve as vehicles for satire or utopian fiction. Less frequently, Earth itself has been visited by inhabitants of the other planets, or even subjected to an alien invasion.
History
Ancient depictions
Locations in the Solar System besides the Earth have appeared as settings in fiction since at least classical antiquity.[1]: 79 [2]: 6 The conceit of journeying to other worlds grew out of the established literary form of the imaginary voyage to exotic locations ostensibly on Earth, typified by Homer's Odyssey.[3]: 80–81 The earliest stories visiting outer space visited other parts of the Solar System—in particular, the Moon.[1]: 79 [4]: 493 Science fiction scholarAdam Roberts writes that for the Ancient Greeks, specifically, the Moon and Sun could be thought of as part of the earthly realm of the sky, rather than the divine realm of the heavens, unlike the stars;[5]: 27–28 Arthur C. Clarke comments that the classical planets visible to the naked eye as point sources of light were thought of as wandering stars, which made visiting them equally unthinkable.[6]: 1 Speculation that the Moon might be inhabited appears in the nonfiction writings of Philolaus and Plutarch, among others.[3]: 80 [7]: 14 [8]: 16 As the literary record from this era is very incomplete, there is uncertainty about the earliest interplanetary voyages in fiction; Roberts and science fiction historian Sam Moskowitz both posit that numerous such stories predating the known ones may have been lost to time.[3]: 80 [5]: 29, 34 The earliest known example is Antonius Diogenes's Of the Wonderful Things Beyond Thule, which includes a journey on foot that reaches the Moon by going northwards. It is a lost literary work of uncertain date—with estimates ranging from the 300s BCE to the 100s CE—known only through a brief summary in Photius's c. 870 work Bibliotheca.[3]: 80–81 [5]: 31 [9]: 311 [7]: 15 The oldest surviving work of this kind is either of two stories by Lucian of Samosata from c. 160–180 CE: Icaromenippus [fi] and True History.[3]: 80–81 [5]: 29, 31 [9]: 311 [8]: 16 In Icaromenippus, the Cynic philosopherMenippus, inspired by the story of Icarus, attaches bird wings to his arms and flies to the Moon to get a better vantage point to resolve the question of the shape of the Earth.[3]: 81 [5]: 31 [7]: 15–18 [8]: 16 True History is a parody of fanciful travellers' tales—in the story, a ship is swept to the Moon by a whirlwind, and the all-male lunar inhabitants are found to be at war with the inhabitants of the Sun over the colonization of the "Morning Star"; science fiction scholar Gary Westfahl considers this reference to Venus the first appearance of any planet in the genre.[5]: 32 [7]: 18–21 [9]: 311 [10]: 134–135 [11]: 164 After Lucian, the interplanetary voyage largely fell out of use for over a millennium—as did, according to Roberts, the genre of science fiction as a whole a few centuries later at the start of the so-called Dark Ages.[5]: 34 [6]: 2 [8]: 16 [12]: 69
The first fictional lunar excursion with a science-based approach was written by Johannes Kepler,[8]: 16–17 [17]: 456 an important figure of the Copernican Revolution who provided the key insight that planetary orbits are not circular as had been previously assumed but elliptical and introduced a set of three laws of planetary motion.[13]: 5–6 [14]: 2–3 [20]: 257 Kepler's Somnium, sometimes considered the first science fiction novel,[a] was written chiefly to explain and advance the Copernican model.[13]: 6 [14]: 3 [23]: 8 [24]: 86, 88 The book describes different populations of intelligent life on the near and far side of the Moon, both with adaptations to the month-long cycle of day and night based on exobiological considerations, and their astronomical perspective: for instance, the inhabitants of the near side are able to determine their location on the lunar surface and the time of day by observing the position of the Earth in the sky and the phase of the Earth, respectively.[16]: 58–59 [24]: 88–92 [25]: 23–25 [26]: 172 The first draft was written in 1593, before being revised in 1609 and then expanded until Kepler's death in 1630, ultimately being published posthumously in 1634; Karl Siegfried Guthke [de] notes that this means that—contrary to the perceptions of some scholars—the story narrowly predates the invention of the telescope.[14]: 3 [24]: 84 [27]: 403 Also in 1634, the first English-language translation of Lucian's True History by Francis Hickes [Wikidata] was published; Moskowitz credits this with launching the literary trend of interplanetary voyages,[3]: 81–82 [28]: 11 while Westfahl more modestly speculates that writers of such stories may have drawn inspiration from it,[23]: 9 and Brian Aldiss, in the 1986 book Trillion Year Spree: The History of Science Fiction, comments that Lucian undoubtedly influenced later writers but ultimately concludes that the more general trends of the Age of Exploration were largely responsible for the profusion of fictional voyages to the Moon.[12]: 70
In the late 1500s and early 1600s, the idea of the plurality of worlds—that other celestial bodies in the Solar System, and maybe also outside of it, are worlds like the Earth and perhaps even inhabited—was controversial especially in the Catholic parts of Europe because it appeared to conflict with established religious views that asserted the primacy of Earth and humanity; Giordano Bruno was convicted of heresy and executed in 1600 in part for this belief.[13]: 7–8 [16]: 51–53, 64 [35]: 380 [36]: 59 By the mid-1600s, however, the controversy had subsided to a degree and the topic appeared in the writings of Cyrano and others;[13]: 8 [16]: 64–65 by the end of the century, it was largely accepted.[37]: 36 [38]: 199 Two works played an important role in popularizing the concept: Bernard Le Bovier de Fontenelle's 1686 work Entretiens sur la pluralité des mondes (Conversations on the Plurality of Worlds) and Christiaan Huygens's posthumously-published 1698 work Cosmotheoros.[38]: 199 [39]: 27 Both are primarily literary rather than scientific works; Guthke takes the apparent broad appeal of Cosmotheoros as evidence that contemporary readers viewed it mainly as science fiction.[40]: 239 There are many similarities between the two works, but they differ in their conception of the inhabitants of the other planets: Fontenelle describes diverse and fundamentally nonhuman lifeforms adapted to the different environmental conditions of the Moon and planets in the Solar System, while Huygens describes beings that are essentially human on the grounds that Earth ought not be unique in this regard.[6]: 5 [40]: 239–241 [41]: 36–40 [42]: 53 [43]: 41–45 Besides depicting a plurality of worlds in the Solar System, Fontenelle's work also popularized the related notion that other stars might have planetary systems of their own just like the Sun;[44]: 500 [45]: 375 [46] while it dismisses the Sun and stars as possible abodes of life, it asserts that there are unseen planets orbiting the fixed stars that are also inhabited.[41]: 40
Through the 1700s
Fiction literature about the Solar System continued to mainly take the form of satires and utopian fiction up until the late 1800s;[2]: 7 Roger Lancelyn Green writes that the scientific advancements of the time may help explain the dominance of the satirical mode throughout the latter part of the 1600s and the 1700s,[42]: 54–56 while J. O. Bailey writes that the satire "deepened and became more philosophical" in this period, whereas Kepler's approach of adhering to known facts of science was only emulated sporadically.[8]: 23–24 Westfahl comments that up through the 1700s, authors "invariably imagined that other planets would have humanlike inhabitants" and used extraterrestrial locations for social commentary, as opposed to conceiving of truly alien societies as became common later in the history of science fiction.[23]: 10 Early feminist science fiction writer Margaret Cavendish's 1666 novel The Blazing World—which describes another planet that is joined to the Earth at the North Pole—contains both utopian elements and satire of the Royal Society, the scientific establishment of the day.[12]: 72–73 [16]: 62–63 [23]: 10 [47]: 484 [48]Gabriel Daniel's 1690 novel A Voyage to the World of Cartesius uses a voyage to the Moon and beyond to satirize the ideas of René Descartes, showing them to produce absurd results (such as the stars being invisible and tides not existing) and depicting Descartes's spirit as occupied with correcting God's errors.[16]: 79 [18]: 101 [23]: 9 [42]: 54–56 Trips to the Moon serve as vehicles for satire of the British political system in Daniel Defoe's 1705 novel The Consolidator and the South Sea Bubble in Samuel Brunt's 1727 novel A Voyage to Cacklogallinia.[49]: 57–61 [50]: 108–109 Among the rare exceptions to the trend are Eberhard Christian Kindermann [de]'s 1744 story "Die Geschwinde Reise", which describes a journey to a moon of Mars the author mistakenly believed he had discovered, and Chevalier de Béthune [Wikidata]'s 1750 novel Relation du Monde de Mercure, the first novel focused specifically on Mercury.[50]: 106 [51]: 456–457 [52]: 9–10 [53]
By the second half of the century [...] stories of space-travel became both more common and more scientific. No doubt the great engineering achievements of the Victorian age had produced a feeling of optimism: so much had already been accomplished that perhaps even the bridging of space was no longer a totally impossible dream.
The 1800s saw the emergence of a greater degree of verisimilitude in stories about space travel, especially in the latter part of the century.[4]: 493 [6]: 5 [57]: 15 George Tucker's 1827 novel A Voyage to the Moon (published under the pseudonym Joseph Atterley) is the earliest known example of anti-gravity both being treated from a scientific rather than supernatural angle[d] and being employed for interplanetary travel.[6]: 7 [58][59]: 45 [60]: 156 Edgar Allan Poe was a student at the University of Virginia in 1826 while Tucker was a professor there and is known to have read his book;[e] in 1835, Poe published a story of his own about a lunar journey: "The Unparalleled Adventure of One Hans Pfaall".[3]: 85 [59]: 45–47 Poe's story contains a mixture of elements that lend credibility to the narrative and whimsical ones,[f] and the preface includes a facetious request for increased verisimilitude in other authors' tales of space travel.[4]: 493 [59]: 45–46 [61]: 140–143 A promised sequel to "Hans Pfaall" never materialized, possibly due to the publication of Richard Adams Locke's so-called "Great Moon Hoax" a few weeks later, which claimed that astronomer John Herschel had discovered life on the Moon through a telescope.[14]: 7–8 [59]: 46–47 The pseudonymous Chrysostom Trueman's 1864 novel The History of a Voyage to the Moon reuses the anti-gravity mechanism of spaceflight and devotes more than half of its length to the details of the spaceship and journey.[3]: 86 [29]: 20 [60]: 156 Achille Eyraud [fr]'s 1865 novel Voyage à Venus, the first novel focused specifically on Venus, was also one of the first[g] since Cyrano's Comical History to use a reaction engine or rocket propulsion for space travel—here, a water-based version.[3]: 86 [60]: 157–158 [62]: 164–165 [65] Taking Poe's preface at face value, Jules Verne strived to write of a believable lunar journey. In Verne's 1865 novel From the Earth to the Moon and its 1870 sequel Around the Moon, a vessel is launched into space by a large cannon before circling the Moon and returning to Earth. On the mode of travel, Clarke notes that the initial ballistic launch would in reality not be survivable, and that while the spaceship uses rockets for steering it apparently did not occur to Verne that they could be used for the rest of the journey as well. Clarke further posits that the absence of a Moon landing in the story may be explained by the lack of a plausible way to return to Earth thereafter.[4]: 493 [6]: 5 [59]: 47–48
The Moon remained the most popular celestial object in fiction, with the Sun a distant second, until Mars overtook them both in the late 1800s.[56]: 110 Although Uranus had been discovered in 1781 and Neptune in 1846, neither received much attention from writers.[1]: 83 [66][67]: 485 Similarly, the first asteroids were discovered at the beginning of the 1800s, but they made scant appearances in fiction for the rest of the century.[68]: 40 [69]: 140 Two major factors contributed to Mars replacing the Moon as the most favoured location: advances in astronomy had determined that the Moon was not habitable, while Mars on the contrary appeared increasingly likely to be so. In particular, during the opposition of Mars in 1877, Italian astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli announced the discovery of linear structures he dubbed canali (literally channels, but widely translated as canals) on the Martian surface.[28]: 11–12 [70]: 105–107 [71]: 29 [72] These purported Martian canals were variously interpreted as optical illusions (as they were later determined to be), natural features, or artificial constructs; Percival Lowell popularized the notion that they were vast engineering projects by an advanced Martian civilization through a series of non-fiction books published between 1895 and 1908.[72][73][74]: 3–4 The first novel focused specifically on Mars was Percy Greg's 1880 novel Across the Zodiac,[71]: 29 [75]: 204 which features a form of anti-gravity dubbed "apergy";[3]: 88 [60]: 156 [70]: 107–108 the term was later adopted in many other works—both fiction and non-fiction—including John Jacob Astor IV's 1894 novel A Journey in Other Worlds, which visits Jupiter and Saturn.[76]: 69–70 [77]: 155 [78]: 369–370 [79] Anti-gravity voyages to Mars also appear in Hugh MacColl's 1889 novel Mr. Stranger's Sealed Packet, Robert Cromie's 1890 novel A Plunge into Space, and Gustavus W. Pope's 1894 novel Journey to Mars.[3]: 88 [70]: 112, 114–115 [80]: 44, 46
Barsoom and its offshoots dominated the interplanetary fiction of the first half of the century.
Robert Markley, Dying Planet: Mars in Science and the Imagination (2005)[90]: 182–183
The interplanetary story in general, and Mars in particular, received an additional boost in popularity with Edgar Rice Burroughs's 1912–1943 Barsoom series beginning with A Princess of Mars.[1]: 80 [83]: 72 [91]: 156 Barsoom, as this version Mars is known, is inhabited by a wide variety of exotic plants and creatures, including several different sentient races and an advanced civilization in decline; Westfahl describes it as "the most famous and well-developed Mars in science fiction".[1]: 80 [92]: 153–154 This depiction of Mars was inspired at least in part by Lowell's speculations, albeit paying scant attention to the scientific niceties surrounding the canal debate in favour of providing a suitable setting for exciting adventures.[14]: 16 [29]: 156 [91]: 156 The stories and setting inspired many other authors such as Leigh Brackett to follow suit, albeit often using other locations in the Solar System and occasionally even beyond.[83]: 72 [92]: 154 [93]: 23–24 Stableford comments in Anatomy of Wonder: A Critical Guide to Science Fiction that although the subgenre Burroughs thus launched is known as the planetary romance, the extraterrestrial setting was largely incidental—chosen not because other planets were believed to match the fictional descriptions, but because Earth was known not to.[93]: 23–24
Roberts writes that the first half of the 1900s was characterized by an increasing divergence between what might be termed "high art" and "popular culture"—the latter being represented in science fiction by the pulps.[94]: 229, 246 The first science fiction magazine was Amazing Stories,[h] launched by Hugo Gernsback in 1926.[14]: 16–17 [97]: 23 This is commonly regarded as the beginning of the pulp era of science fiction,[98]: 109 [99]: 45 though by this time science fiction stories had already been regularly published in pulp magazines not specialized in the genre for decades (for instance, Serviss's A Columbus of Space and Burroughs's A Princess of Mars both first appeared in The All-Story Magazine), and the majority of science fiction continued to be published in general pulp magazines rather than science fiction ones.[14]: 15 [81]: 21 [88]: 257 [100] Gernsback found that interplanetary stories were his readership's favourite kind and decided to cater to this preference; one of his magazines, Wonder Stories Quarterly, bore the text "Interplanetary Stories" above the title from the Spring 1931 issue onward, and science fiction bibliographer E. F. Bleiler notes that two-thirds of the stories in these issues were interplanetary stories, with the vast majority of the remainder being "marginal or related".[28]: 9 [101]: 596–597 Moskowitz comments that Gernsback's actions, and his competitors' response in turn, thus hastened the evolution of "what was to become the most popular theme of science fiction".[28]: 9
The 1900s saw the emergence of a new subgenre—planetary romance—in works like Burroughs's Barsoom series.[2]: 7 [102][103]: 23 These stories flourished in the new pulp magazines,[29]: 29 [104] and the subgenre reached its peak between the 1930s and 1950s.[105]: xiii Works of this kind typically portrayed Mars as a desert planet and Venus as covered in jungle.[2]: 7 Eventually, the subgenre moved to locations outside of the Solar System.[103]: 24
Westfahl comments that "the 1930s were dominated by space operas set within the solar system", noting that in the catalogue of early science fiction works compiled by E. F. Bleiler and Richard Bleiler in the 1998 reference workScience-Fiction: The Gernsback Years, which lists all stories published in science fiction magazines between 1926 and 1936, Mars alone appears in more than 10% of the stories and Venus around 7%.[11]: 165 [92]: 146
Works set on the Moon were less common due to a desire to depict alien life and the apparent deadness of the lunar surface, though some writers circumvented this issue by placing life underground as Wells had in The First Men in the Moon; examples include Burroughs in the 1926 novel The Moon Maid, where the Moon is hollow, and P. Schuyler Miller in the 1931 short story "Dust of Destruction".[10]: 137 [17]: 457 [87] This later became a popular way to dispense with the need for space suits in science fiction films in the 1950s and 1960s.[10]: 137 Similarly, deep lunar valleys containing pockets of air capable of sustaining life appear in works such as Fritz Lang's 1929 film Frau im Mond and Victor Rousseau Emanuel's 1930 short story "The Lord of Space"; the concept had earlier appeared in George Griffith's 1901 novel A Honeymoon in Space.[10]: 137–138 Other depictions of lunar lifeforms from this era confine it to the distant past or the far side of the Moon.[87]
Pluto was discovered in 1930, and was relatively popular in fiction in the decades that followed as the apparent outermost planet of the Solar System.[66] Its popularity exceeded that of Uranus and Neptune;[106]: 242 Stableford posits that its initial popularity can at least in part be attributed to its then-recent discovery.[107]: 382
Stories involving the four giant planets of the outer Solar System—Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune—erroneously portrayed them as solid planets.[67]: 486 [108]: 553–554 [109]: 379–380 This continued until the late 1950s.[110]: 255
This was also the era where stories stretching beyond the confines of the Solar System started appearing regularly; earlier examples had been few and far between.[14]: 19 [44]: 501 [46]
Advances in planetary science in the early years of the Space Age rendered previous notions of the conditions of several locations in the Solar System obsolete.[83]: 69–74 [114]
Similarly, the success of Apollo 11 in 1969 marked the end for stories about fictional first Moon landings.[9]: 313
The planets of the Solar System only appeared sporadically as settings in the 1970s.[105]: xvi Extrasolar locations became favoured instead.[2]: 7 [74]: 9 There was a resurgence towards the end of the century with themes like terraforming.[2]: 7 [105]: xvi
Games—both video games and tabletop games—use Solar System locations as settings infrequently, and typically as a kind of interchangeable exotic background element.[2]: 8
Planetary tours
Traversing the various worlds of the Solar System, sometimes called a "Grand Tour", is a recurring motif.[29]: 16–17 [45]: 375–376 [115] The first such story was Athanasius Kircher's 1656 work Itinerarium exstaticum,[29]: 16 [115] which also engaged in the ongoing cosmological debate between the heliocentric and geocentric model, ultimately endorsing the intermediate Tychonic system.[16]: 68–70 [18]: 100 [116] Fontenelle's Entretiens sur la pluralité des mondes and Huygen's Cosmotheoros also tour the Solar System in their explorations of the plurality of worlds later in the century, though in both cases the journeys are mental rather than physical.[40]: 239 [117]: 58–62 [118]: 312
Schematic diagram of the orbits of the fictional planets Vulcan, Counter-Earth, and Phaëton in relation to the five innermost planets of the Solar System.
Various imaginary constituents of the Solar System have appeared in fiction.[45]: 375 [115][119]: 539–540 Outer-space equivalents of the Sargasso Sea appear on occasion.[119]: 540 [120]
^Sometimes referred to as a "demon", but Brian Stableford and Karl Siegfried Guthke [de] note that Kepler used a term derived from a Greek word relating to knowledge, daiein.[20]: 258 [24]: 88
^When the book was written is uncertain, with estimates ranging from sometime before 1600 at the earliest to not long before Godwin's death in 1633 at the latest; modern scholarship largely favours a relatively late date of composition.[30]: 33 [31] See The Man in the Moone § Dating evidence for details.
^The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction lists Godwin's The Man in the Moone, where a "semi-magical" stone has the power to make gravity stronger or weaker, as the earliest story where a variation on the antigravity theme appears.[58]
^For instance, Poe describes the voyage thoroughly, including detailed astronomical data. He also posits a thin interplanetary atmosphere that both enables balloon flight (using a fictitious gas several times lighter than hydrogen gas) and necessitates a machine to ensure a supply of breathable air. On the other hand, the parts set on Earth have a generally farcical tone such as characters having absurd names. Roberts writes that Poe "uses some of the conventions of the April Fool's joke".[14]: 7 [59]: 45–46 [61]: 140–143
^Sam Moskowitz says "it is the second known work, after Cyrano de Bergerac, to use the reaction-engine principle in order to traverse stellar distances",[3]: 86 Adam Roberts says that the book "is praised by historians of rocket science as the first fictionalisation of a reaction propulsion system",[60]: 157–158 and Roger Lancelyn Green says that the "Space-ship is the first in all fiction (setting aside Cyrano's short trip in his firework-car) to be propelled through Space by rocket propulsion".[62]: 164–165 However, John Clute, writing in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, identifies as an earlier example Elbert Perce [Wikidata]'s 1851 novel Gulliver Joi, wherein the title character (a descendant of Lemuel Gulliver, the protagonist of Jonathan Swift's 1726 novel Gulliver's Travels) travels to the fictional planet "Kailoo". According to Clute, both Gulliver Joi and Voyage à Venus are candidates for being the first plausible depiction of a rocket-propelled spaceship, with Eyraud's description being the significantly stronger of the two.[63][64]
^Sometimes described as the first science fiction pulp magazine,[95]: 16 though it was not initially a pulp magazine and would not be until 1933. The first science fiction magazine that was also a pulp magazine was Astounding Stories of Super-Science when it launched in 1930.[96]
^ abcdefghijCaryad; Römer, Thomas; Zingsem, Vera (2014). "Alte Träume, neue Mythen" [Old Dreams, New Myths]. Wanderer am Himmel: Die Welt der Planeten in Astronomie und Mythologie [Wanderers in the Sky: The World of the Planets in Astronomy and Mythology] (in German). Springer-Verlag. pp. 6–8. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-55343-1_1. ISBN978-3-642-55343-1.
^ abGuthke, Karl Siegfried (1990). "'Coming of Age': Triumph and Trauma". The Last Frontier: Imagining Other Worlds, from the Copernican Revolution to Modern Science Fiction. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. pp. 199–226. ISBN978-0-8014-1680-4.
^ abcRoberts, Adam (2016). "Eighteenth-Century SF: Big, Little". The History of Science Fiction. Palgrave Histories of Literature (2nd ed.). Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 85–119. doi:10.1057/978-1-137-56957-8_5. ISBN978-1-137-56957-8. OCLC956382503. Critics have noted how Voltaire's fable re-uses the trope of giants and midgets from Swift's Travels. What is not so often noticed is his major innovation of inverting the dominant 17th-century SF premise; instead of travellers from the Earth encountering aliens and quizzing them about their Christian-religious orthodox, he imagines aliens coming to Earth, the first such story.
^ abCrossley, Robert (2011). "H. G. Wells and the Great Disillusionment". Imagining Mars: A Literary History. Wesleyan University Press. p. 110. ISBN978-0-8195-6927-1. Until the Schiaparelli era, the most favored destination for extraterrestrial travel remained the Moon, followed more distantly by the Sun. [...] But in the last decades of the nineteenth century, a discernible shift of locale took place. Fictional goings and comings between Earth and Mars took precedence over all other forms of the interplanetary romance.
^ abLangford, David; Stableford, Brian (2021). "Outer Planets". In Clute, John; Langford, David; Sleight, Graham (eds.). The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (4th ed.). Retrieved 2025-02-16. For a long while, relatively little attention was paid in sf to the planets beyond Jupiter. Of them only Saturn was known to the ancients – Uranus was discovered in 1781, Neptune in 1846 and Pluto in 1930 – and it is therefore the only outer planet featured in Athanasius Kircher's and Emanuel Swedenborg's interplanetary tours. [...] For several decades Pluto came in for a certain amount of special attention as the apparent Ultima Thule of the solar system [...] Uranus is little discussed in traditional sf. [...] Neptune, like Uranus, makes only relatively rare sf appearances except as part of a Grand Tour. [...] Pluto, during the period when its orbit seemed to mark the outermost limit of the solar system, was popular for just that reason.
^ abcRusso, Arturo (2001). "Dreams of Space Flight". In Bleeker, Johan A.M.; Geiss, Johannes; Huber, Martin C.E. (eds.). The Century of Space Science. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 26–29. ISBN978-94-010-0320-9.
^Hotakainen, Markus (2010). "Little Green Persons". Mars: From Myth and Mystery to Recent Discoveries. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 201–216. ISBN978-0-387-76508-2. The first science fiction novel situated on Mars is considered to be Percy Greg's Across the Zodiac: The Story of a Wrecked Record, published in 1880.
^Tymn, Marshall B. (1985). "Science Fiction: A Brief History and Review of Criticism". American Studies International. 23 (1): 41–66. ISSN0883-105X. JSTOR41278745. Science fiction entered a new phase when, in 1926, Gernsback placed the first issue of Amazing Stories on the newsstands. [...] With Amazing Stories the pulp era of science fiction began.
^Mollmann, Steven (2011). "Space Travel in Science Fiction". In Grossman, Leigh (ed.). Sense of Wonder: A Century of Science Fiction. Wildside Press LLC. ISBN978-1-4344-4035-8. Travel within the solar system was also a staple of the planetary romance genre that flourished in pulp magazines
^Stableford, Brian (1999). "Pluto". The Dictionary of Science Fiction Places. Wonderland Press. p. 242. ISBN978-0-684-84958-4. As with the other outer planets, relatively few descriptions of Pluto have been brought back by multiversal explorers. Its status as the outermost planet has, however, conferred a certain mystique upon it which has led to its alternativersal variants being more widely reported—and more exotically differentiated—than those of Neptune or Uranus.
^Stanway, Elizabeth (2024-07-28). "Second Satellites". Warwick University. Cosmic Stories Blog. Archived from the original on 2024-08-06. Retrieved 2024-12-01. In all of the stories mentioned above, explanations are provided for why the second moon has never been seen: it may be tiny, may not exist in our space time, may be newly brought into orbit, or may exist only for a few brief weeks or months before orbital decay.
Caryad; Römer, Thomas; Zingsem, Vera (2014). "Alte Träume, neue Mythen" [Old Dreams, New Myths]. Wanderer am Himmel: Die Welt der Planeten in Astronomie und Mythologie [Wanderers in the Sky: The World of the Planets in Astronomy and Mythology] (in German). Springer-Verlag. pp. 6–8. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-55343-1_1. ISBN978-3-642-55343-1.
Russo, Arturo (2001). "Dreams of Space Flight". In Bleeker, Johan A.M.; Geiss, Johannes; Huber, Martin C.E. (eds.). The Century of Space Science. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 26–29. ISBN978-94-010-0320-9.