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We report on the detection of PSR 1706-44 in two ROSAT-PSPC observations. The recorded source counts are unpulsed with a $2sigma$ pulsed fraction upper limit of 18%. Spectral analysis did not distinguish between black-body and power law models; however, we argue that the lack of pulsations and the similarity in the pulsars spin parameters to those of the Vela pulsar favour a power law model $dN/dEpropto E^{-2.4pm 0.6}$ and indicate synchrotron emission from a pulsar-powered nebula as the origin of the detected X-radiation. The X-ray flux derived for the power law model is f_x=3.2^{+6.5}_{-1.8} x E-12 erg/ s/ cm^2 within the 0.1-2.4 keV energy range. An upper limit for the neutron stars surface temperature is put at Log T_s^infty sim 6.03 K for a neutron star with a medium stiff equation of state (FP-model with M=1.4 Mo, R=10.85 km). Slightly different values for $T_s^infty$ are computed for the various neutron star models available in the literature, reflecting the difference in the equation of state. No soft X-ray emission is detected from the supernova remnant G343.1-2.3, proposed to be associated with PSR 1706-44.
Observations made with the University of Durham Mark 6 atmospheric Cerenkov telescope confirm that PSR B1706-44 is a very high energy gamma-ray emitter. There is no indication from our dataset that the very high energy gamma-rays are pulsed, in contr
We report the results of the observations of the three gamma-ray pulsars PSR B0656+14, PSR B1055-52 and PSR B1706-44 performed with BeppoSAX. We detected a pulsed emission only for PSR B1055-52: in the range 0.1-6.5 keV the pulse profile is sinusoida
We present the results of new Agile observations of PSR B1509-58 performed over a period of 2.5 years following the detection obtained with a subset of the present data. The modulation significance of the lightcurve above 30 MeV is at a 5$sigma$ conf
The predicted nature of the candidate redback pulsar 3FGL,J2039.6$-$5618 was recently confirmed by the discovery of $gamma$-ray millisecond pulsations (Clark et al. 2020, hereafter Paper,I), which identify this $gamma$-ray source as msp. We observed
We report on simultaneous X-ray and radio observations of the radio-mode-switching pulsar PSR B1822-09 with ESAs XMM-Newton and the WSRT, GMRT and Lovell radio telescopes. PSR B1822-09 switches between a radio-bright and radio-quiet mode, and we disc