The lunar lander, which ended up on its side, managed to send back more photos even though it had only hours left before it died.
Intuitive Machines on Tuesday posted new photos of the moon’s unexplored south polar region.
The company’s Odysseus lander took the photo last Thursday, just before the United States became the first country to land on the moon in more than 50 years.
Odysseus landed on his side, disrupting communications and power generation.
Operations will end when sunlight no longer reaches the lander’s solar panels.
Intuitive Machines expects that to happen between Tuesday afternoon and early Wednesday.
The mission, part of NASA’s efforts to boost the lunar economy, was scheduled to last until at least Thursday, when the lunar night begins.
NASA has six experiments on board.
Intuitive Machines became the first private company to land a spacecraft on the moon without crashing.
Another U.S. company launched its own lunar lander last month, but a fuel leak caused the mission to fail and the lander crashed to Earth.
