We present a theoretical description and numerical simulations of the
superconducting transition in hybrid structures including strong spin-orbit
interactions. The spin-orbit coupling is taken to be of Rashba type for
concreteness, and we allow for an arbitrary magnitude of the spin-orbit
strength as well as an arbitrary thickness of the spin-orbit coupled layer.
This allows us to make contact with the experimentally relevant case of
enhanced interfacial spin-orbit coupling via atomically thin heavy metal
layers. We consider both interfacial spin-orbit coupling induced by inversion
asymmetry in an S/F-junction, as well as in-plane spin-orbit coupling in the
ferromagnetic region of an S/F/S- and an S/F-structure. Both the pair
amplitudes, local density of states and critical temperature show dependency on
the Rashba strength and, importantly, the orientation of the exchange field. In
general, spin-orbit coupling increases the critical temperature of a proximity
system where a magnetic field is present, and enhances the superconducting gap
in the density of states. We perform a theoretical derivation which explains
these results by the appearance of long-ranged singlet correlations. Our
results suggest that Tc in ballistic spin-orbit coupled superconducting
structures may be tuned by using only a single ferromagnetic layer.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures. Published in PR