If what I say above is correct, then another experiment can be imagined. Two photons generated by SPDC with broad spectral power density are made to fall on two input ports of a beam splitter with a delay between them which is much greater than the temporal coherence of two photons. Therefore, the two photons do not interfere and the probability of the two photons going in two output arms and the two photons going in same output port is 1/2 in both cases. A narrow wavelength filter (in a thought experiment can be assumed to be a delta function in wavelength domain) is placed in one output port (port A) of the beam splitter. If the detector in this output port A now makes a click, then the coherence time of the other photon (in output port B) becomes infinite. In such a case, photon of port B should have interacted with the photon that has been detected at port A. I understand that the question of interference seems impossible since one photon has already been detected. But then again, that raises the question for me: when does the coherence time of the second photon change to infinity? Exactly at the instant when the photon at output port B is detected? Or when this photon passes through the spectral filter? Or did this photon did did interfere with the other photon of same wavelength component and has been detected afterwards?
This last question can be answered by looking at the statistics of coincidence counts with and without the spectral filter.