We study accretion in binaries hosting an intermediate mass black hole (IMBH)
of 1000 solar masses, and a donor star more massive than 15 solar masses. These
systems experience an active X-ray phase characterized by luminosities varying
over a wide interval, from <10^36 erg/s up to a few 10^40 erg/s typical of the
ultra luminous X-ray sources (ULXs). Roche lobe overflow on the zero-age main
sequence and donor masses above 20 solar masses can maintain a long-lived
accretion phase at the level required to feed a ULX source. In wide systems,
wind transfer rates are magnified by the focusing action of the IMBH yielding
wind luminosities around 10^38 erg/s. These high mass-IMBH binaries can be
identified as progenitors of IMBH-radio pulsar (PSR) binaries. We find that the
formation of an IMBH-PSR binary does not necessarely require the transit
through a ULX phase, but that a ULX can highlight a system that will evolve
into an IMBH-PSR, if the mass of the donor star is constrained to lie within 15
to 30 solar masses. We show that binary evolution delivers the pre-exploding
helium core in an orbit such that after explosion, the neutron star has a very
high probability to remain bound to the IMBH, at distances of 1-10 AU. The
detection of an IMBH-PSR binary in the Milky Way has suffered, so far, from the
same small number of statistics limit affecting the population of ULXs in our
Galaxy. Ongoing deeper surveys or next generation radio telescopes like SKA
will have an improved chance to unveil such intriguing systems. Timing analysis
of a pulsar orbiting around an IMBH would weigh the black hole in the still
uncharted interval of mass around 1000 solar massesComment: 10 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS. Few comments
added (minor revision