Michel Lazard
Michel Paul Lazard was a French mathematician who worked on the theory of Lie groups in the context of analysis.
Career and research
Born in Paris, Lazard studied at the University of Paris–Sorbonne, where he obtained his Ph.D. in 1954 under the direction of Albert Châtelet, with thesis titled Sur les groupes nilpotents et les anneaux de Lie. Subsequently he was a professor at the University of Poitiers and the University of Paris 7. He died of suicide at the age of 63.His work took on a life of its own in the hands of Daniel Quillen in the late 20th century. Quillen's discovery, that a ring Lazard used to classify formal group laws was isomorphic to an important ring in topology, led to the subject of chromatic homotopy theory. Lazard's self-contained treatise on one-dimensional formal groups also gave rise to the field of p-divisible groups. His major contributions were:
- The classification of p-adic Lie groups: every p-adic Lie group is a closed subgroup of.
- The classification of formal groups.
- The universal formal group law coefficient ring is a polynomial ring.
- The concept of "analyseurs", reinvented by J. Peter May under the name operads.
Awards and honours