Study of measured pulsar masses and their possible conclusions
C.M. Zhang, J. Wang, Y.H. Zhao, H.X. Yin, L.M. Song, D. P. Menezes, D., T. Wickramasinghe, L. Ferrario, P. Chardonnet

TL;DR
This study analyzes the masses of 61 neutron stars in binary systems, revealing average masses, differences between millisecond and other pulsars, and implications for their formation processes, including accretion and collapse scenarios.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive statistical analysis of neutron star masses and explores the implications for pulsar recycling and accretion-induced collapse theories.
Findings
Average neutron star mass is 1.46 solar masses.
Millisecond pulsars are slightly more massive than others.
Less than 20% of MSPs may originate from white dwarf collapse.
Abstract
We study the statistics of 61 measured masses of neutron stars (NSs) in binary pulsar systems, including 18 double NS (DNS) systems, 26 radio pulsars (10 in our Galaxy) with white dwarf (WD) companions, 3 NSs with main-sequence companions, 13 NSs in X-ray binaries, and one undetermined system. We derive a mean value of M = 1.46 +/- 0.30 solar masses. When the 46 NSs with measured spin periods are divided into two groups at 20 milliseconds, i.e., the millisecond pulsar (MSP) group and others, we find that their mass averages are, respectively, M=1.57 +/- 0.35 solar masses and M=1.37+/- 0.23 solar masses. In the framework of the pulsar recycling hypothesis, this suggests that an accretion of approximately 0.2 solar mass is sufficient to spin up a neutron star and place it in the millisecond pulsar group. An empirical relation between the accreting mass and MSP spin period is \Delta M=0.43…
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