The existence of a length-scale ξK∼1/TK (with TK the Kondo
temperature) has long been predicted in quantum impurity systems. At low
temperatures T≪TK, the standard interpretation is that a
spin-21 impurity is screened by a surrounding `Kondo cloud' of
spatial extent ξK. We argue that renormalization group (RG) flow between
any two fixed points (FPs) results in a characteristic length-scale, observed
in real-space as a crossover between physical behaviour typical of each FP. In
the simplest example of the Anderson impurity model, three FPs arise; and we
show that `free orbital', `local moment' and `strong coupling' regions of space
can be identified at zero temperature. These regions are separated by two
crossover length-scales ξLM and ξK, with the latter
diverging as the Kondo effect is destroyed on increasing temperature through
TK. One implication is that moment formation occurs inside the `Kondo
cloud', while the screening process itself occurs on flowing to the strong
coupling FP at distances ∼ξK. Generic aspects of the real-space
physics are exemplified by the two-channel Kondo model, where ξK now
separates `local moment' and `overscreening' clouds.Comment: 6 pages; 5 figure