21921 Camdenmiller
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| Name | |
|---|---|
| Name | Camdenmiller |
| Designation | 1999 VE49 |
| Discovery | |
| Discoverer | LINEAR |
| Discovery date | November 3, 1999 |
| Orbital elements | |
| Epoch October 27, 2007 (JDCT 2454400.5) | |
| Eccentricity (e) | 0.1671605 |
| Semimajor axis (a) | 2.2939112 AU |
| Perihelion (q) | 1.9107583 AU |
| Aphelion (Q) | 2.6777809 AU |
| Orbital period (P) | 3.48 a |
| Inclination (i) | 4.8189° |
| Longitude of the ascending node (Ω) | 259.20737° |
| Argument of Perihelion (ω) | 19.63879° |
| Mean anomaly (M) | 215.20403° |
21921 Camdenmiller is a main belt asteroid with a perihelion of 1.9836232 AU. It has an eccentricity of 0.1671605 and an orbital period of 1269.3023872 days (3.48 years).[1]
Caesar has an average orbital speed of 19.66346981 km/s and a inclination of 4.81869°.
The asteroid was discovered on November 3, 1999 by LINEAR.
This asteroid was named for Camden Yinhung Miller, a finalist in the 2005 Discovery Channel Young Scientist Challenge.[1]

