Electric fields may decay by quantum tunneling: as calculated by Schwinger, an electron-positron pair may be summoned from the vacuum. In this paper, I calculate the pair-production rate at nonzero temperatures. I find that, at high temperatures, the decay rate is dominated by a new instanton that involves both thermal fluctuation and quantum tunneling; this decay is exponentially faster than the rate in the literature. I also calculate the decay rate when the electric field wraps a compact circle (at zero temperature). The same new instanton also governs this rate: I find that, for small circles, decay is dominated by a process that drops the electric field by one unit, but does not produce charged particles.
CITATION STYLE
Brown, A. R. (2018). Schwinger pair production at nonzero temperatures or in compact directions. Physical Review D, 98(3). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.98.036008
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