We present a study of the correlated transport regimes of a double quantum
impurity system with mutual capacitive interactions. Such system can be
implemented by a double quantum dot arrangement or by a quantum dot and nearby
quantum point contact, with independently connected sets of metallic terminals.
Many--body spin correlations arising within each dot--lead subsystem give rise
to the Kondo effect under appropriate conditions. The otherwise independent
Kondo ground states may be modified by the capacitive coupling, decisively
modifying the ground state of the double quantum impurity system. We analyze
this coupled system through variational methods and the numerical
renormalization group technique. Our results reveal a strong dependence of the
coupled system ground state on the electron--hole asymmetries of the individual
subsystems, as well as on their hybridization strengths to the respective
reservoirs. The electrostatic repulsion produced by the capacitive coupling
produces an effective shift of the individual energy levels toward higher
energies, with a stronger effect on the `shallower' subsystem (that closer to
resonance with the Fermi level), potentially pushing it out of the Kondo regime
and dramatically changing the transport properties of the system. The effective
remote gating that this entails is found to depend nonlinearly on the
capacitive coupling strength, as well as on the independent subsystem levels.
The analysis we present here of this mutual interaction should be important to
fully characterize transport through such coupled systems.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. B. 11 pages, 10 figure