A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

The INTEGRAL view of the pulsating hard X-ray sky: from accreting and transitional millisecond pulsars to rotation-powered pulsars and magnetars




AuthorsA. Papitto, M. Falanga, W. Hermsen, S. Mereghetti, L. Kuiper, J. Poutanen, E. Bozzo, F. Ambrosino, F. Coti Zelati, V. De Falco, D. de Martino, T. Di Salvo, P. Esposito, C. Ferrigno, M. Forot, D. Götz, C. Gouiffes, R. Iaria, P. Laurent, J. Li, Z. Li, T. Mineo, P. Moran, A. Neronov, A. Paizis, N. Rea, A. Riggio, A. Sanna, V. Savchenko, A. Słowikowska, A. Shearer, A. Tiengo, D. F. Torres

PublisherElsevier

Publication year2020

JournalNew Astronomy Reviews

Journal acronymNewAstrRev

Article number101544

Volume91

Number of pages26

ISSN1387-6473

eISSN1872-9630

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.newar.2020.101544

Web address https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S138764732030021X?via=ihub

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://arxiv.org/abs/2012.01346


Abstract

In the last 25 years, a new generation of X-ray satellites imparted a significant leap forward in our knowledge of X-ray pulsars. The discovery of accreting and transitional millisecond pulsars proved that disk accretion can spin up a neutron star to a very high rotation speed. The detection of MeV-GeV pulsed emission from a few hundreds of rotation-powered pulsars probed particle acceleration in the outer magnetosphere, or even beyond. Also, a population of two dozens of magnetars has emerged. INTEGRAL played a central role to achieve these results by providing instruments with high temporal resolution up to the hard X-ray/soft gamma-ray band and a large field of view imager with good angular resolution to spot hard X-ray transients. In this article, we review the main contributions by INTEGRAL to our understanding of the pulsating hard X-ray sky, such as the discovery and characterization of several accreting and transitional millisecond pulsars, the generation of the first catalog of hard X-ray/soft gamma-ray rotation-powered pulsars, the detection of polarization in the hard X-ray emission from the Crab pulsar, and the discovery of persistent hard X-ray emission from several magnetars.


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