We derive a microscopic transport theory of multiterminal hybrid structures
in which a superconductor is connected to several spin-polarized electrodes. We
discuss the non-perturbative physics of extended contacts, and show that it can
be well represented by averaging out the phase of the electronic wave function.
The maximal conductance of a two-channel contact is proportional to (e2/h)(a0/D)2exp[−D/ξ(ω∗)], where D is the distance between the
contacts, a0 the lattice spacing, ξ(ω) is the superconducting
coherence length, and ω∗ is the cross-over frequency between a
perturbative regime (ω<ω∗) and a non perturbative regime
(ω∗<ω<Δ). The intercontact Andreev reflection and elastic
cotunneling conductances are not equal if the electronic phases take a fixed
value. However, these two quantities do coincide if one can average out the
electronic phase. The equality between the Andreev and cotunneling conductances
is also valid in the presence of at least one extended contact in which the
phases take deterministic values.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, revised version, biblio update