This paper describes the Plateau de Bure Neutron Monitor (PdBNM), an
instrument providing continuous ground-level measurements of atmospheric
secondary neutron flux resulting from the interaction of primary cosmic rays
with the Earth's atmosphere. The detector is installed on the Plateau de Bure
(Devoluy mountains, south of France, latitude North 44{\deg} 38' 02", longitude
East 5{\deg} 54' 26", altitude 2555 m) as a part of the ASTEP Platform
(Altitude Single-event effects Test European Platform), a permanent
installation dedicated to the study of the impact of terrestrial natural
radiation on microelectronics circuit reliability. The present paper reports
the neutron monitor design, its operation since August 2008 and its complete
numerical simulation using the Monte Carlo codes GEANT4 and MCNPX. We
particularly detail the computation of the neutron monitor detection response
function for neutrons, muons, protons and pions, the comparison between GEANT4
and MCNPX numerical results and the evaluation of the PdBNM counting rate a
function of both the nature and flux of the incident atmospheric particles.Comment: 37 pages, 14 figures, 5 tables; numerical error in GEANT4 particle
sourse corrected, section 4.4 was significantly revised. Submitted to IEEE
Transactions on Nuclear Scienc