Bertrand Meigh Peek M.A. F.R.A.S. (1891 – 1965) was a British astronomer.
Peek used an observatory at Solihull, Birmingham, England, from 1923 until 1947 to make a series of observations (with notes published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.) The observatory was dismantled in 1947.[1] Among the targets of his observations was the planet Jupiter, and he served as director of the Jupiter Section of the British Astronomical Association (BAA). From 1930 until 1931 he also directed the Mars Section of the BAA. He served as president of the BAA from 1938 until 1940.
In 1958 he published The Planet Jupiter, a treatise on the giant planet based on visual observations of the planet by the Jupiter Section of the BAA. (A revised version of this book was published in 1981.)
Based on notes provided by his son Brian to the BAA,[2] Bertrand Peek:
The Moon crater Peek is named after him.