Upon completing his formal education and a post doctoral appointment at
Yale University with
Kumpati S. Narendra, Akella joined the faculty of the Department of Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics,
Cockrell School of Engineering at
The University of Texas at Austin in 1999. Early in his academic career, he studied
hummingbird flight kinematics and their inspiration for agile micro-air vehicles. He made fundamental contributions to spacecraft attitude tracking control without making use of rate-gyros, and thus significantly reducing the number of sensors that are required to track any rotating space object. The gyro-free attitude controllers were successfully implemented onboard a pair of spacecraft as part of the
European Union's QB50 mission to provide multi-point measurements of the mid-lower thermosphere, located between the 200-400 km altitude range. Akella's current research encompasses control theoretic investigations and experimental validation of a wide variety of complex engineered dynamical systems that include autonomous space vehicles and robotics; cislunar astrodynamics; flow-control systems for high-speed and hypersonic vehicles; miniature robots navigating inside GPS-denied environments; uncertainty quantification; and cooperative control, learning, and collaborative sensing problems in swarm robots. The control algorithms provided by Akella and his students have been validated and successfully employed within flight applications, most notably through
NASA’s
Seeker (spacecraft) and the Waverider X-51 scramjet unmanned experimental research program. His research group contributed for the onboard guidance algorithm for the
Intuitive Machines IM-1 mission in 2024 – the first U.S. moon landing in more than 50 years since the Apollo era. For his far-reaching theoretical contributions and practical advances in aerospace guidance, navigation and control, particularly nonlinear attitude estimation and control, Akella was recognized with several prestigious awards including the
American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) Mechanics and Control of Flight Award, the
American Astronautical Society (AAS) Dirk Brouwer Award, the
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Control Systems Society Award for Technical Excellence in Aerospace Control, and the IEEE Judith A. Resnik Space Award. During 2021-2022, Akella served as the Technology lead facilitator for the Urban Air Mobility Advisory Committee established by the Texas State Legislature tasked to assess current state law and provide necessary recommendations for facilitating air mobility operations and infrastructure within the state. In 2019, Akella was named Editor-in-Chief for The Journal of the Astronautical Sciences. He serves on the editorial board for the AIAA
Journal of Guidance, Control, and Dynamics and an elected member on the Board of Directors for the
American Astronautical Society. During 2016-19, he served as an IEEE Distinguished Lecturer for the Aerospace and Electronic Systems Society -- a recognition given to “engineering professionals who help lead their fields in new technical developments that shape the global community.” Akella is a Fellow of the AIAA, IEEE, and AAS and holds the Academician rank with the
International Academy of Astronautics. During October 2024, the
International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Small Bodies Nomenclature designated asteroid number 5376 – a nearly 5-mile diameter-sized minor planet from the main asteroid belt – as “Maruthiakella” honoring Akella’s contributions to “many successful applications in astrodynamics.” In March 2025, Akella was awarded a VAIBHAV Fellowship from the
Government of India Ministry of Science and Technology as the first ever honoree to receive this recognition in the aerospace technologies field. Under this flagship VAIBHAV program, he is tasked with building a collaborative network of researchers working on programs aligned with India’s aerospace research priorities, and exchange practices between the India and the U.S., as well as strive to address opportunities for technology commercialization. == Awards and honors ==