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February 2026 offers a string of notable sky events for observers worldwide.
Early in the month the full “Snow” Moon peaks on Feb. 1 and a minor Alpha Centaurids meteor window arrives Feb. 8–9 for southern-hemisphere viewers.
NASA’s Artemis II crewed lunar mission has a launch window that opens in early February (agencies have cited dates around Feb. 6–8), marking the first human mission beyond low Earth orbit in more than 50 years.
Feb. 17 brings a new moon, the close passage of comet C/2024 E1 (Wierzchos), and an annular “ring of fire” solar eclipse visible in full only over parts of Antarctica and the adjacent Southern Ocean, with partial views from southern South America and southern Africa.
Mercury reaches greatest eastern elongation on Feb. 19, and on Feb. 28 a much-discussed six-planet “planet parade” (Mercury, Venus, Saturn, Jupiter, Uranus and Neptune) will be closely aligned after sunset; Venus and Jupiter will be easiest to see, while Uranus and Neptune require binoculars or a small telescope.
Observing will be constrained by twilight, the bright waxing gibbous moon on Feb. 28, and local horizons and weather.
🔗 Based On
Travel + Leisure: Travel Reviews, News, Guides & TipsFebruary Has 8 Night Sky Wonders Including a 'Ring of Fire' Eclipse and More
Technology | The Indian ExpressThe February Planet Parade explained: Why six planets don’t mean six easy sightings













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