
Asteroid 21351, Bhagwat, was discovered on March 4, 1997 by MIT Lincoln Laboratory's Near-Earth Asteroid Research (LINEAR) program at Socorro, New Mexico. It has a period of 4 years, 51 days.
It was named for Livonia, Michigan high-school student Samuel Mohun Bhagwat (born 1988), who submitted a math project in the 2005 Intel Science Talent Search, in which he reached the finals.

Sam Bhagwat
Astrologically, asteroid Bhagwat has been linked to spirituality and religion; divinity; or the attitudes "I am God" or "God help you."
Parahamsa Yogananda had Bhagwat in the ninth house, on the Midheaven, sextile Pallas, square the Moon and Nessus, and trine Chaos.
Mahatma Gandhi had Bhagwat square Uranus.
Muhammad Iqbal had Bhagwat sextile Juno, square Pallas and trine Pholus.
Nurcholish Madjid, a prominent liberal Indonesian Muslim intellectual, had Bhagwat square the Nodes and opposite Juno.
Bahaullah, founder of the Baha'i Faith, had Bhagwat trine Mars and Pholus and quincunx Vesta.
Abdul-Baha, Bahaullah's son and a leading expounder of Bahaism, had Bhagwat square Ceres and Ixion.
Gene Robinson has Bhagwat in the twelfth house, square the Midheaven.
Pope John Paul II had Bhagwat in the third house, sextile Hylonome, square Pallas, and trine Ixion.
Pope Benedict XVI has Bhagwat in the sixth house, on the Descendant, trine Juno and quincunx Nessus and Dioretsa.
Thomas Merton had Bhagwat in the seventh house, on the eighth cusp, square Mars and quincunx Nessus.
The glyph for Bhagwat is mine.