Highly accurate quantum electron dynamics calculations demonstrate that energy can be efficiently transferred between quantum dots. Specifically, in a double quantum dot an incoming electron is captured by one dot and the excess energy is transferred to the neighboring dot and used to remove an electron from this dot. This process is due to long-range electron correlation and shown to be operative at rather large distances between the dots. The efficiency of the process is greatly enhanced by preparing the double quantum dot such that the incoming electron is initially captured by a two-electron resonance state of the system. In contrast to atoms and molecules in nature, double quantum dots can be manipulated to achieve this enhancement. This mechanism leads to a surprisingly narrow distribution of the energy of the electron removed in the process which is explained by resonance theory. We argue that the process could be exploited in practice. [2,[4][5][6][7] together with new phenomena handed down from the semiconductor nature of QDs [8-11] many of which endowed new technological applications to be cast into reality. In this work we concentrate on energy transfer between two QDs driven by long-range electron correlation and mediated by the capture of an electron.Electron capture in single QDs is an extensively studied topic [12][13][14] due to its relevance in the development of technological applications. The capture efficiency and its time scale depend substantially on temperature, carrier density, material and geometry of the QDs [13][14][15]. The capture and the later relaxation dynamics occur through diverse physical processes such as electronphonon interactions [13,14,16,17], multiple exciton generation [12] and Auger relaxation [15], all of which can be assessed using pump-probe schemes [10,[12][13][14]17]. Capture by optical phonon emission has been investigated in single [16,18,19] as well as in double QDs [18]. So far, electronically-induced inter-dot capture processes have not been considered at all. In the present work we use numerically exact quantum dynamics to show that electron capture by one QD in a DQD becomes possible by energy transfer to the neighboring QD due to long-range electron correlation. Originally, such processes were predicted to operate between atoms [20,21] where electron capture by one atom occurs while another electron is emitted from an atom in its environment and called interatomic electronic Coulombic capture (ICEC), a name which we would like to adopt also for QDs. For completeness we mention that energy transfer between quantum wells has been studied in a different context, see, e.g., [22,23].For explicit demonstration we study a system comprised of two different QDs which we call the left and right QDs and which are described by the model potentials discussed below. Let the left potential well support a one-electron level L 0 and the right one, R 0 . Although included in the calculation, the tunneling between L 0 and R 0 is vanishingly small due to the long inter-dot di...