On February 28, six planets will be visible shortly after sunset: Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
Mark February 28 on your calendar.
The snow moon, February's full moon, will peak Sunday, Feb. 1, and a lunar eclipse will occur March 2-3. Here's what to know.
A rare planetary parade will march across the sky on Saturday, Feb. 28, according to NASA. Venus, Mercury, Saturn, Jupiter, ...
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.
Mercury, Venus, Neptune, Saturn, Uranus and Jupiter will appear together shortly after sunset on Feb. 28 — but is this the "planet parade" we've been waiting for?
From Mercury’s rare appearance to NASA’s Artemis II launch window, here’s everything to watch in the skies this month.
Stargazers across Washington state are in for a treat.
The moon greets Jupiter two days ahead of its full moon phase on Feb. 1.
Stargazers can see six planets all in one evening during the second month of the year, especially Mercury, which is usually ...
California stargazers can observe a parade of six planets in the night sky throughout February, but the best time to see the ...
Pennsylvania stargazers can soon see a full “snow” moon peak, along with a “planetary parade” later in February.