“…However, for a long time, there was a shortage of detailed studies on radio eclipses because of the challenges in observation equipment and the low number of known spider pulsars. The last few years have marked a revival in this field, thanks to the unprecedented development of observation equipment, such as the Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR), Green Bank Telescope, and Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope (FAST), etc., and the extensive and novel studies of several eclipsing pulsars, such as PSRs J2215+5135 (Broderick et al 2016), B1957+20 (Fruchter et al 1988(Fruchter et al , 1990Fruchter & Goss 1992;Polzin et al 2020;Bai et al 2022), J1227-4853 (Kudale et al 2020), J1744+4937 (Lyne et al 1990), J2051-0827 (Stappers et al 2001;Polzin et al 2019;Wang et al 2023), J1544+4937 (Bhattacharyya et al 2013;Roy et al 2015), J2055+3829 (Guillemot et al 2019), J1810+1744 (Polzin et al 2018), J1720-0533 (Wang et al 2021), and J1544+4937 (Kumari et al 2023(Kumari et al , 2024, beginning to provide important insights into the nature of eclipsing spider pulsar systems.…”