The superconducting proximity effect leads to strong modifications of the
local density of states in diffusive or chaotic cavity Josephson junctions,
which displays a phase-dependent energy gap around the Fermi energy. The
so-called minigap of the order of the Thouless energy ETh is
related to the inverse dwell time in the diffusive region in the limit
ETh≪Δ, where Δ is the superconducting energy gap.
In the opposite limit of a large Thouless energy ETh≫Δ, a
small new feature has recently attracted attention, namely, the appearance of a
further secondary gap, which is around two orders of magnitude smaller compared
to the usual superconducting gap. It appears in a chaotic cavity just below the
superconducting gap edge Δ and vanishes for some value of the phase
difference between the superconductors. We extend previous theory restricted to
a normal cavity connected to two superconductors through ballistic contacts to
a wider range of contact types. We show that the existence of the secondary gap
is not limited to ballistic contacts, but is a more general property of such
systems. Furthermore, we derive a criterion which directly relates the
existence of a secondary gap to the presence of small transmission eigenvalues
of the contacts. For generic continuous distributions of transmission
eigenvalues of the contacts, no secondary gap exists, although we observe a
singular behavior of the density of states at Δ. Finally, we provide a
simple one-dimensional scattering model which is able to explain the
characteristic "smile" shape of the secondary gap.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure