Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Have you ever seen a planet parade, also known as a planetary alignment? That's when several planets in the night sky line up, ...
Stargazers this month will get to see not just two or three, but six planets in alignment across the night sky. This “planetary parade” consisting of Mercury, Venus, Neptune, Saturn, Uranus, and ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. This weekend provides a rare treat for stargazers. Well, planets, to be more specific. Mercury, Venus, Neptune, Saturn, Uranus and ...
Who’s ready for a “planet parade”? The last planetary alignment was in August 2025, when six planets aligned and four were bright enough to be seen without a telescope. Next week, Mercury, Venus, ...
This weekend is the last chance to see any of February’s much-hyped “planet parade” or “planetary parade” before it completely fades from view. While six planets are technically above the horizon ...
A planetary alignment featuring Venus, Mars, Saturn, Jupiter, and the moon in 2022. Later this month, skywatchers won't want to miss a must-see moment when six planets—Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, Mercury, ...
For the first time since January 2025, six planets will be visible in the sky at once, causing what's commonly known as a "planetary parade." Depending on the configuration, four, five or six planets ...
This weekend, a rare celestial occasion will feature a bright six-planet parade in a planetary alignment visible to stargazers. Mercury, Venus, Neptune, Saturn, Uranus and Jupiter will will appear to ...
Stargazers will be able to see a large planetary alignment in August The Farmer's Almanac website puts prime viewing for the planetary alignment on Aug. 18, "45 minutes before sunrise" It's been a ...
A rare celestial occasion will light up the Saturday evening skyline, featuring a bright six-planet parade in a special planetary alignment visible to stargazers. Mercury, Venus, Neptune, Saturn, ...
Ready to trade that shovel for a telescope? There's something headed to the Garden State this weekend and no — it's not snow! The first celestial event of the year is on the horizon and this time it's ...