We have obtained evidence of gamma-ray emission above 1 TeV from PSR1706-44,
using a ground-based telescope of the atmospheric \v{C}erenkov imaging type
located near Woomera, South Australia. This object, a γ-ray source
discovered by the COS B satellite (2CG342-02), was identified with the radio
pulsar through the discovery of a 102 ms pulsed signal with the EGRET
instrument of the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory. The flux of the present
observation above a threshold of 1 TeV is ∼ 1 ⋅ 10−11
photons cm−2 s−1, which is two orders of magnitude smaller than the
extrapolation from GeV energies. The analysis is not restricted to a search for
emission modulated with the 102 ms period, and the reported flux is for all
γ-rays from PSR1706-44, pulsed and unpulsed. The energy output in the
TeV region corresponds to about 10−3 of the spin down energy loss rate of
the neutron star.Comment: 13 pages, latex format (article), 2 figures include