On February 28, six planets will be visible shortly after sunset: Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
Skygazers, mark your calendars because one of the coolest celestial events is coming around again toward the end of February.
Stargazers can see six planets all in one evening during the second month of the year, especially Mercury, which is usually ...
From dazzling Jupiter high in the evening sky to elusive Mercury low at sunset, February 2026 offers one of the year's best ...
Six planets are about to stack up in the evening sky in a rare alignment that will briefly turn the western horizon into a live solar system diagram. For a short window after sunset, Mercury, Venus, ...
The month is packed with skywatching highlights—including six visible planets, an annular solar eclipse, and the Milky Way’s bright core returning to view in the Northern Hemisphere.
Explore the visibility of Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn in February 2026. Discover observation dates, locations and details based on Space.com and NASA data.
The big astronomical event in February is a rare “planetary parade,” according to NASA. You’ll be able to see Mercury, Venus, ...
That will be a partial solar eclipse where the moon will block 70% of the sun from view. A rare planetary parade will march across the sky on Saturday, Feb. 28, according to NASA. Venus, Mercury, ...
The First Planet Parade of 2026 Is Approaching: Here's How to See It ...