Matthew Verbryke is a systems engineering lead and PhD candidate in Aerospace Engineering with nine years of hands-on experience advancing autonomous space systems and CubeSat missions. He leads HABSat-1 and has repeatedly steered UC CubeCats through roles from ADCS team lead to chief engineer and president, combining project management, hardware design, and software integration. His graduate research focuses on resilient autonomy for humanoid and dual-arm robots in space—translating resilience architectures into real robotic demos—and he contributes to student satellite builds and test infrastructure like low-cost Helmholtz cages. Comfortable bridging academic research and mission delivery, he has experience with LEOP operations, stakeholder coordination, and end-to-end subsystem leadership. An early background in quality and project engineering gives him a practical eye for manufacturability and testability that complements his autonomy expertise.
9 years of coding experience
2 years of employment as a software developer
Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics, Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics at University of Cincinnati
Control software for the UC Cubecats Helmholtz Cage (WIP)
Contributions:1 release, 37 commits, 5 PRs in 4 years
helmholtzwipcage
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