Accreting pulsars: mixing-up accretion phases in transitional systems
Sergio Campana, Tiziana Di Salvo

TL;DR
This paper reviews the recent discoveries of accreting and transitional millisecond pulsars, emphasizing their role in understanding neutron star evolution and the link between accretion and rotation-powered states.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the properties and behaviors of accreting and transitional MSPs, highlighting new insights into their evolutionary connection.
Findings
Discovery of sources switching between accretion and rotation-powered pulsations
Identification of transitional MSPs as a direct link between LMXBs and radio MSPs
Characterization of the properties of accreting and transitional MSPs
Abstract
In the last 20 years our understanding of the millisecond pulsar (MSP) population changed dramatically. Thanks to RXTE, we discovered that neutron stars in LMXBs spins at 200-750 Hz frequencies, and indirectly confirmed the recycling scenario, according to which neutron stars are spun up to ms periods during the LMXB-phase. In the meantime, the continuous discovery of rotation-powered MSPs in binary systems in the radio and gamma-ray band (mainly with the Fermi LAT) allowed us to classify these sources into two "spiders" populations, depending on the mass of their companion stars: Black Widow, with very low-mass companion stars, and Redbacks, with larger companions possibly filling their Roche lobes but without accretion. It was soon regained that MSPs in short orbital period LMXBs are the progenitors of the spider populations of rotation-powered MSPs, although a direct link between…
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