Michel Enock-Levi (born June 1, 1947) is a French mathematician and a,[1] credited with the early development of Pontryagin-style dualities for non-commutative topological groups.
Enock is known for the 1992 book co-authored with Jean-Marie Schwartz on the subject of Kac algebras,[2] (not to be confused with Kac-Moody algebras). According to the French mathematician Alain Connes,[3] the book develops the general theory to characterize quantum groups among Hopf algebras, similar to the characterization of Lie groups among locally compact groups, "with emphasis on the analytical aspects of the subject instead of the purely algebraic ones". Further, Connes writes: Specifically, Enock co-developed a general Pontryagin duality theory for all locally compact groups.
Enock completed his postgraduate thesis (1971) and state thesis (1976) at Pierre and Marie Curie University. In 1971, he became an assistant professor at the University of Paris 13 (Sorbonne Paris North University). From 1978, he was a Researcher at the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS). He received accreditation to direct research at Paris Diderot University in 1985. Enock became a Director of Research at CNRS in 2000 and a First class Research Director in 2011. From 2012, he has been Emeritus Research Director at CNRS.[1]