Lattice Monte Carlo studies in SU(3) gauge theory have shown that the
topological charge distribution in the vacuum is dominated by thin coherent
membranes of codimension one arranged in a layered, alternating-sign sandwich.
A similar lamination of topological charge occurs in the 2D CPN−1 model.
In holographic QCD, the observed topological charge sheets are naturally
interpreted as D6 branes wrapped around an S4.. With this interpretation,
the laminated array of topological charge membranes observed on the lattice can
be identified as a "tachyonic crystal", a regular, alternating-sign array of
D6 and D6ˉ branes that arises as the final state of the decay of a
non-BPS D7 brane via the tachyonic mode of the attached string. In the gauge
theory, the homogeneous, space-filling D7 brane represents the perturbative
gauge vacuum, which is unstable toward lamination associated with a marginal
tachyonic boundary perturbation ∝cos(X/2α′). For the
CPN−1 model, the cutoff field theory can be cast as the low energy limit
of an open string theory in background gauge and tachyon fields Aμ(x)
and λ(x). This allows a detailed comparison with large N field theory
results and provides strong support for the tachyonic crystal interpretation of
the gauge theory vacuum.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figure