Seven-Planet Alignment to Be Visible on February 28, Offering a Celestial Spectacle and Scientific Insights
Stargazers will be treated to a rare sight on February 28, when a seven-planet alignment graces the night sky. The alignment will feature Mercury joining six other planets—Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune—in a spectacle visible from Earth. While these events are a visual treat, they also hold scientific significance for astronomers.
Currently, six planets are visible to the naked eye on clear nights in January and February, forming a planetary parade across the sky. On February 28, the alignment will be complete when Mercury, the closest planet to the Sun, becomes visible. The planets, while not perfectly aligned, will appear in an arc due to the flat plane of their orbits in the Solar System.
Jenifer Millard, an astronomer at Fifth Star Labs in the UK, emphasized the unique experience of witnessing such events firsthand. “There is something special about looking at the planets with your own eyes,” she said. “When you’re looking at these objects, these are photons that have traveled millions or even billions of miles through space to reach you.”
For scientists, planetary alignments like this one offer opportunities to explore the dynamics of our Solar System. The planets orbit the Sun at varying speeds, with Mercury completing an orbit in just 88 days, while Neptune takes about 165 years. These different speeds occasionally cause the planets to align in such a way that multiple planets appear in the night sky at once. While most of these alignments are visually striking, their potential to influence life on Earth remains a subject of debate.
In 2019, physicist Frank Stefani suggested that alignments of certain planets could impact solar activity, possibly influencing the Sun’s 11-year cycle. Stefani proposed that the gravitational pull of planets like Venus, Earth, and Jupiter could cause subtle internal rotations within the Sun, potentially driving solar events. However, not all scientists agree with this theory, with some arguing that solar cycles are primarily driven by internal processes within the Sun itself.
Regardless of their impact on solar activity, planetary alignments are valuable for space exploration. Alignments have been used to slingshot spacecraft to outer planets, dramatically reducing travel time. The Voyager spacecraft, for example, capitalized on a 1977 alignment of outer planets to visit Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, cutting decades off the journey time.
Additionally, alignments are essential in the study of exoplanets. By observing the transit of planets across stars, astronomers can gather valuable data about planetary atmospheres, identifying gases like oxygen and carbon dioxide. These alignments, both in our Solar System and beyond, help deepen our understanding of the cosmos.
As February 28 approaches, this rare seven-planet alignment promises to captivate both amateur stargazers and seasoned scientists alike, offering a reminder of the intricate and awe-inspiring nature of our place in the universe.
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Covid-19 Hospitalisations Decline Despite New Variant Surge: Experts Weigh In
Covid-19 remains widespread, but hospitalisations have dropped significantly, raising questions about the reasons behind this shift. Experts are grappling with the mystery, especially after the emergence of XEC, a new Covid-19 variant that gained prominence in autumn 2024.
XEC, a descendant of the Omicron variant, has raised alarms among virologists due to its potential to evade immunity from previous infections and vaccines. The variant arose through recombination, a process where genetic material from two other variants fused together. Early tests suggested XEC could bypass protection offered by past infections and the latest Covid-19 vaccines, particularly those targeting the older JN.1 and KP.2 variants.
However, despite concerns, the expected surge in hospitalisations following the Thanksgiving holiday in the United States did not materialize. While surveillance testing revealed widespread infection of XEC through wastewater samples, hospitalisation rates remained remarkably low. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), hospitalisation rates at the start of December 2024 were just two per 100,000 people, a sharp decline from the previous year’s rate of 6.1 per 100,000.
Peter Chin-Hong, a professor of Infectious Diseases at the University of California, San Francisco, noted that, despite the high levels of Covid detected, few patients are critically ill. “It just shows that regardless of how scary a variant might look in the lab, the environment in which it lands is much more inhospitable,” he explained.
Experts have suggested that Covid-19 in 2025 may have become a milder disease. Common symptoms such as loss of taste and smell are becoming less frequent, and most people now experience mild cold-like symptoms, often mistaken for seasonal allergies. While immunocompromised individuals and the elderly are still at higher risk, Chin-Hong believes that Covid has become much less severe overall.
Despite this, experts caution that Covid-19 remains a persistent threat to public health. The risk of long Covid, while decreasing, still looms for some individuals, and the possibility of more severe variants emerging in the future cannot be ruled out. As a result, health authorities continue to recommend that vulnerable populations receive the latest Covid-19 vaccines, which can offer protection against serious illness, hospitalisation, and death.
Microbiologist Harm Van Backel, co-leader of the Mount Sinai Pathogen Surveillance Program, noted that, despite the emergence of XEC, Covid-19 has contributed relatively little to hospitalisation rates this winter, with other respiratory viruses taking precedence. He attributed the lower hospitalisation rates to more effective treatments and better immunity in the population.
While Covid-19 may have become less invasive, experts caution that the situation remains unpredictable. Long-term effects, such as persistent gastrointestinal infections linked to Covid, are still being studied. Research continues to focus on developing next-generation vaccines and therapies to better control the virus and its potential future evolution.
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