On Tuesday, the cargo ship rocketed away from Virginia's eastern shore and is expected to reach the International Space Station on Thursday.
GSLV-F10 will launch from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre SHAR in Sriharikota with the Earth Observation Satellite, EOS-03, on August 12.
NASA published the images of a small mound with a hole next to the rover, which was the first-ever dug into Mars by a robot. When the data was sent to the Earth by the rover, it indicated that no rock had been gathered.
The portrait features various colourful shades, as the caption of the space agency suggested.
Taking to Instagram, NASA shared the post with the caption: "You're listening to 13 billion years' worth of data. The galaxies in this Hubble Ultra Deep Field image from 2014 are represented in sound!..."
While the galaxy on the left can be seen facing the frame, the centre is horizontally perpendicular to the edge, while the third has a long visible trail of shiny stardust.
In 1 year and 13 days, they both come closest to each other. Previously, they came close on July 20, 2020, and will again do so on August 14, 2022.
The agency wrote that the waves of solar plasma shoot billions of particles into space “at about 1 million miles, or 1,600,000 kilometres, per hour.”
While the first picture is of the Phytoplankton bloom in the Baltic sea, the second and third pictures are from the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the Labrador Sea.
This move aims to raise money for conservation as the traditional sources of funding have dried up during the ongoing pandemic.