Monday, February 2, 2026

What's Up: February 2026 Skywatching Tips from NASA - UNIVERSE

 

The Moon readies for Artemis II, Orion shines bright, and a planetary parade marches across the night sky

NASA's Artemis II mission has its first opportunity to launch to the moon, Orion the Hunter takes center stage, and a planetary parade marches across the night sky.

Skywatching Highlights

  • Feb: Artemis II launch window opens.
  • Feb: Orion the Hunter ideal viewing
  • Mid-Late Feb: Planetary Parade

Transcript

The Moon could have human visitors for the first time since 1972, the constellation Orion will be clear to see, and a planetary parade will sparkle across the skies.

That's What's Up, this February.

The Moon could have some visitors soon!

NASA's Artemis II mission will send astronauts to fly around the Moon. The first opportunities for launch are this February.

This mission will pave the way for Artemis III, which will be the first time we’ve sent humans to the lunar surface since the final Apollo mission, Apollo 17, in 1972.

So this month, look up to the Moon shining bright in the night sky and there might be somebody looking back down at you.

Can you spot Orion the Hunter in the night sky?

NASA/JPL-Caltech

You might be able to see the line of three stars that make up Orion's Belt, but that belt is a part of a larger constellation called Orion, named for the hunter in Greek mythology.

Above Orion's belt, the hunter's right shoulder is actually Betelgeuse (or Alpha Orionis), one of the brightest stars in the night sky!

NASA/JPL-Caltech

Most visible in the winter, February is one of the clearest times to see Orion in the sky.

From dusk through the night, look to the southern sky and try and spot the hunter for yourself.

A planetary parade will march across the sky this month!

NASA/JPL-Caltech

Mid-February, Saturn will drop down toward the horizon as Venus and Mercury climb upward in the sky, meeting together in the west to southwestern sky.

Jupiter will find itself high in the sky.

And even Uranus, found in the southern sky, and Neptune, found nearby Saturn, will join the parade—though you'll need binoculars or a telescope to spot these two far-off planets.

The planets will be visible soon after sunset throughout the month of February, but they’ll be lined up best toward the end of the month.

So, go outside and see how many planets you can find!

Here are the phases of the Moon for February.

NASA/JPL-Caltech

You can stay up to date on all of NASA's missions exploring the solar system and beyond at science.nasa.gov.

I'm Chelsea Gohd from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and that's What's Up for this month. 

Source: What’s Up: February 2026 Skywatching Tips from NASA - NASA Science

As fossil fuel use declines, experts urge planning and coordination to prevent chaotic collapse - Business - Energy & Green Tech

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

As the world shifts toward renewable energy sources, some experts warn that a lack of planning for the retirement of fossil fuels could lead to a disorderly and dangerous collapse of existing systems that could prolong the transition to green energy.

In a study published in the journal Science, University of Notre Dame researchers Emily Grubert and Joshua Lappen argue that fossil fuel systems might be far more fragile than current energy models assume.

"Systems designed to be large and growing behave differently when they shrink," said Grubert, associate professor of sustainable energy policy at Notre Dame's Keough School of Global Affairs and a faculty affiliate of the Keough School's Pulte Institute for Global Development. "Ignoring this shift puts everything at risk, from the success of green energy to the basic safety and reliability of our power."

The researchers introduced the concept of "minimum viable scale," a threshold of production below which a fossil fuel system can no longer function safely or economically. They provided examples of vulnerabilities in three major sectors:

  • Petroleum refineries: Most refineries are incapable of operating normally at low capacity and likely have "turndown limits," or a minimum operational capacity, of roughly 65% to 70%. If gasoline demand drops sharply due to electric vehicle adoption, for example, a refinery might become incapable of providing other products such as jet fuel or asphalt.
  • Natural gas pipelines: As customers switch to electric heating and cooling, those remaining on the gas grid will have to shoulder the fixed costs of maintaining miles of pipelines. This can create a "death spiral" where rising costs drive customers away.
  • Coal generation: The authors highlighted a "managerial constraint" where the fate of coal mines and power plants is inextricably linked. A single plant closure can make a local mine unprofitable. Conversely, a mine closure can leave a power plant without its specific, geographically dependent fuel source, leading to a cascade of failures.

The researchers report that the decline of fossil fuels is unlikely to follow the smooth, linear path often depicted in hypothetical decarbonization scenarios. Instead, they identify a series of physical, financial, and managerial "cliffs" that could trigger localized energy crises, price shocks, and safety threats long before fossil fuels are retired.

Policymakers have focused intensely on the build-out of green energy while largely ignoring the managed decline of the current systems that still provide 80% of global energy—a critical oversight, they said.

"None of these systems were designed with their own obsolescence in mind," said Lappen, a postdoctoral researcher at the Pulte Institute who studies how energy networks grow and shrink over time.

"None of the engineers, founding executives, economists, or accountants involved ever imagined a system that would gradually and safely hand off to another."

The danger, according to the authors, is that these systems are "networks of networks." If one piece fails—a pipeline, a specialized labor pool, or a regulatory body—the entire regional energy support system could dissolve.

"If you are leaving decisions about things staying open or closing to individual operators who are not coordinated in any way, this can be incredibly dangerous," Grubert said.

How to manage decline

To avoid disruption of services, the researchers argued that the current U.S. approach of bailouts and bankruptcies is inefficient. They recommended four key solutions for policymakers and energy modelers:

  • High-resolution modeling: Energy modelers should develop tools that provide high-resolution representation of fossil fuel assets to identify when specific facilities reach their minimum viable scale.
  • Coordination across ownership boundaries: Policymakers must establish management structures that coordinate decisions across ownership boundaries to prevent a single failure from triggering a cascade of collapses.
  • Public management for public need: As systems become unprofitable, they may require significant new investments to remain safe and reliable in the short term, while still committing to closure. Such decisions should be managed by government entities.
  • Guaranteed liabilities: Governments should create mechanisms to guarantee the payment of long-term liabilities—"bills" due at the end of a project such as safely tearing down power plants, cleaning up polluted soil, or paying out pensions to workers—to ensure that declining systems are not simply abandoned by private operators.

Without such intervention, the authors warn, the "mid-transition" period to zero carbon energy could be defined by instability. If the decline is unmanaged, the resulting price spikes and reliability issues could undermine public trust in the energy transition itself, potentially stalling progress toward meeting important climate goals.

"We will be more creative and more successful if we think about the process outside the moment of crisis," Grubert said. "Focusing more attention on the behavior of fossil systems under decline can help put timely solutions into place." 

Provided by University of Notre Dame 

Source: As fossil fuel use declines, experts urge planning and coordination to prevent chaotic collapse