Six-Planet Night Sky Parade Graces February Evenings

Six planets—Jupiter, Saturn, Venus, Mercury, Neptune and Uranus—will be visible at once in the early-evening sky over the next few days, a rare alignment last seen with all seven last year and not due again until 2040. Neptune and Uranus require binoculars or a telescope, while Venus will be the brightest and Mercury the faintest near the horizon. The best viewing windows are after sunset (about 5:45 pm UK / 6:00 pm US), with the lineup forming a curved arc across the western sky; the pattern differs in the southern hemisphere. NASA has released new sonifications from the Chandra X-ray Observatory for Jupiter, Saturn, and Uranus. The Moon will also be visible, and observers should avoid looking at the Sun through binoculars or telescopes.
- Six planets due to parade across night sky in rare celestial spectacle | Astronomy The Guardian
- How and when to see 6 planets aligned in a planetary parade CNN
- Seen the 2026 planet alignment? How about listening to it? NASA reveals what the parade planets sound like BBC Sky at Night Magazine
- Rare parade of planets to align in night sky, NASA says ABC News
- Rare 'planetary parade' will return to the evening sky this week — but you'll have to look at exactly the right time Live Science
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