Abstract

Spectral and temporal correlations determine the majority of pulse properties, and a high degree of coherence is needed for minimizing the pulse length. However, there is no simple way to quantify these correlations experimentally, and nonlinear methods are often required. In this paper, we confirm an earlier proposed experiment [Koivurova et al., Opt. Lett. 44, 522 (2019)] that can accurately estimate the spectral degree of coherence of arbitrary nonstationary fields. The method is entirely linear and can retrieve the quasicoherent contribution of the spectral correlation function. In particular, the method can be used to measure the overall degree of spectral coherence in a single-shot manner. We first establish the theoretical framework behind the method and experimentally test it for a bulk-generated supercontinuum. Our experimental results are in good agreement with the theory and confirm our earlier numerical findings [Halder et al., Photon. Res. 7, 1345 (2019)]. Moreover, the results yield insight into supercontinuum generation in bulk material.

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