For a closed Riemannian 2-manifold
M, the scalar curvature has a clear relation to the
topology of
M, expressed by the
Gauss–Bonnet theorem: the total scalar curvature of
M(being equal to twice the Gaussian curvature) is equal to 4 times the
Euler characteristic of
M. For example, the only closed surfaces with metrics of positive scalar curvature are those with positive Euler characteristic: the sphere
S2 and
RP2. Also, those two surfaces have no metrics with scalar curvature ≤ 0.
Nonexistence results In the 1960s,
André Lichnerowicz found that on a
spin manifold, the difference between the square of the
Dirac operator and the
tensor Laplacian (as defined on spinor fields) is given exactly by one-quarter of the scalar curvature. This is a fundamental example of a
Weitzenböck formula. As a consequence, if a Riemannian metric on a closed manifold has positive scalar curvature, then there can exist no
harmonic spinors. It is then a consequence of the
Atiyah–Singer index theorem that, for any closed spin manifold with dimension divisible by four and of positive scalar curvature, the
 genus must vanish. This is a purely topological obstruction to the existence of Riemannian metrics with positive scalar curvature. Lichnerowicz's argument using the
Dirac operator can be "twisted" by an auxiliary
vector bundle, with the effect of only introducing one extra term into the Lichnerowicz formula. Then, following the same analysis as above except using the families version of the index theorem and a refined version of the  genus known as the
α-genus,
Nigel Hitchin proved that in certain dimensions there are
exotic spheres which do not have any Riemannian metrics of positive scalar curvature. Gromov and Lawson later extensively employed these variants of Lichnerowicz's work. One of their resulting theorems introduces the homotopy-theoretic notion of
enlargeability and says that an enlargeable spin manifold cannot have a Riemannian metric of positive scalar curvature. As a corollary, a closed manifold with a Riemannian metric of nonpositive curvature, such as a
torus, has no metric with positive scalar curvature. Gromov and Lawson's various results on nonexistence of Riemannian metrics with positive scalar curvature support a conjecture on the vanishing of a wide variety of topological invariants of any closed spin manifold with positive scalar curvature. This (in a precise formulation) in turn would be a special case of the
strong Novikov conjecture for the
fundamental group, which deals with the
K-theory of C*-algebras. This in turn is a special case of the
Baum–Connes conjecture for the fundamental group. In the special case of four-dimensional manifolds, the
Seiberg–Witten equations have been usefully applied to the study of scalar curvature. Similarly to Lichnerowicz's analysis, the key is an application of the
maximum principle to prove that solutions to the Seiberg–Witten equations must be trivial when scalar curvature is positive. Also in analogy to Lichnerowicz's work, index theorems can guarantee the existence of nontrivial solutions of the equations. Such analysis provides new criteria for nonexistence of metrics of positive scalar curvature.
Claude LeBrun pursued such ideas in a number of papers.
Existence results By contrast to the above nonexistence results, Lawson and Yau constructed Riemannian metrics of positive scalar curvature from a wide class of nonabelian effective group actions. Later, Schoen–Yau and Gromov–Lawson (using different techniques) proved the fundamental result that existence of Riemannian metrics of positive scalar curvature is preserved by
topological surgery in codimension at least three, and in particular is preserved by the
connected sum. This establishes the existence of such metrics on a wide variety of manifolds. For example, it immediately shows that the connected sum of an arbitrary number of copies of
spherical space forms and generalized cylinders has a Riemannian metric of positive scalar curvature.
Grigori Perelman's construction of
Ricci flow with surgery has, as an immediate corollary, the converse in the three-dimensional case: a closed
orientable 3-manifold with a Riemannian metric of positive scalar curvature must be such a connected sum. Based upon the surgery allowed by the Gromov–Lawson and Schoen–Yau construction, Gromov and Lawson observed that the
h-cobordism theorem and analysis of the
cobordism ring can be directly applied. They proved that, in dimension greater than four, any non-spin
simply connected closed manifold has a Riemannian metric of positive scalar curvature. Stephan Stolz completed the existence theory for simply-connected closed manifolds in dimension greater than four, showing that as long as the α-genus is zero, then there is a Riemannian metric of positive scalar curvature. According to these results, for closed manifolds, the existence of Riemannian metrics of positive scalar curvature is completely settled in the three-dimensional case and in the case of simply-connected manifolds of dimension greater than four. ==Kazdan and Warner's trichotomy theorem==