Spectral Interferometry
Capturing the phase of light
Table of Contents
Photons and phase
Light has properties of both particles (photons) and waves (electromagnetic fields). For time-resolved spectroscopy, the wave description is of particular interest and utility. Unfortunately, the detectors available for measuring visible light are fundamentally “photon detectors” (also known as “square-law” detectors1) since they measure the intensity (

For many nonlinear spectroscopy techniques, we need to measure the complete electric field of the signal, including its phase. Luckily, there are methods for achieving this. One particularly powerful approach is known as spectral interferometry (SI).2 SI involves spatially overlapping a known “reference” field with the unknown signal field and then measuring the spectrum of the combined fields (known as a spectral interferogram). The resulting spectral interference encodes the magnitude and phase of the signal field, which can be extracting using the Fourier-transform spectral interferometry (FTSI) algorithm.3
Mathematical basis of spectral interferometry
A spectral interferogram of spatially-overlapped signal
- Variables topped with a circumflex (e.g.,
) are complex-valued. is the absolute value of complex quantity . is the complex conjugate of .- A complex number
can be expressed in terms of its real and imaginary parts or its absolute value and phase :
We can rewrite the first interference term as
where
Using this new form for
Therefore, by the Fourier modulation theorem5, when the reference field is delayed relative to the signal field (i.e.,
Fourier-transform spectral interferometry algorithm
Let’s simulate a spectral interferogram between an exponentially-damped sinusoidal “signal” field
where
where
For the sake of example, we will use the following parameter values:
To simulate the measured spectral interferogram, we add the Fourier-transformed signal and reference fields together, square the result (since we measure intensity), and eliminate the negative frequency part using the Heaviside step function (since a spectrometer only resolves positive frequencies). The resulting spectral interferogram
After Fourier transforming our interferogram, we get the complex-valued time-domain interferogram
To isolate
Fourier transforming back to the frequency domain yields the product of signal and reference fields
Notice that the spectrum is highly modulated. This is due to the time delay between the signal and reference fields and is an effect we’d like to remove. To fully isolate the signal field, we divide the signal–reference product
Finally, we can Fourier transform back to the time domain to compare the recovered signal field
Notice that the rising edge of the signal field near
Appendices
(A.I) Fourier transform7
By my convention, the (forward) Fourier transform is used to go from the frequency domain to the time domain while the inverse Fourier transform goes from time to frequency (i.e.,
(Forward) Fourier transform
Inverse Fourier transform
(A.II) Electric fields
Since electric fields are measurable, they must be real-valued in the time domain.
Based on the above Fourier transform conventions,
- Square-law detector - Wikipedia ^
- Spectral Interferometry - frog.gatech.edu ^
- L. Lepetit, G. Chériaux, and M. Joffre, “Linear techniques of phase measurement by femtosecond spectral interferometry for applications in spectroscopy,” J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 12, 2467-2474 (1995) ^
- Here, I’ve used the identity
. ^ - Modulation Theorem - mathworld.wolfram.com ^
- Heaviside step function - Wikipedia ^
- Fourier transform - Wikipedia ^