In
quantum electrodynamics (QED), the
Schwinger limit is a scale above which the
electromagnetic field is expected to become
nonlinear. The limit was first derived in one of QED's earliest theoretical successes by
Fritz Sauter in 1931 and discussed further by
Werner Heisenberg and his student Hans Euler. The limit, however, is commonly named in the literature for
Julian Schwinger, who derived the leading nonlinear corrections to the fields and calculated the production rate of electron–positron pairs in a strong electric field. The limit is typically reported as a maximum
electric field before nonlinearity for the vacuum of