Look west just after sunset from this weekend for a chance to see some of six planets, though the best views will be had ...
Jupiter, Mercury, Neptune, Saturn, Uranus, and Venus—will appear in the sky together in a special planet parade on Feb. 28.
Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune are all in the evening sky, but you’ll need binoculars, timing, and a ...
A rare ‘six-planet parade’ is set to light up our skies later month (28th February) with experts revealing exactly how to ...
Every once in a while, the mechanics of our solar system grant Earth and its residents a better-than-average view, as is the ...
Mercury, Venus, Neptune, Saturn, Uranus and Jupiter will appear together shortly after sunset on Feb. 28 — but is this the ...
A rare six-planet parade will dazzle the evening sky in 2026. Mercury, Venus, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Jupiter will appear together after sunset. Here’s when, where and how to watch this stunning ...
From a rare lunar occultation of Regulus and a six-planet parade to an annular solar eclipse, there will be plenty going on in the night sky in February 2026.
February evenings are quietly setting the stage for a wide planetary lineup, visible soon after sunset and stretching across ...
February: it’s a short month, and it’s also relatively short on stargazing highlights. Still, patient stargazers will be ...
A planet parade is basically the nickname given when the planets in our solar system appear to line up in a roughly straight line from the Earth’s perspective. Just after sunset on 28 February, six of ...
The Planet Parade 2026 will light up the February sky as six planets line up after sunset. The best night to watch is February 28, with Jupiter and Venus clearly visible and others needing binoculars.