Researchers have now launched a project in Antarctica to record X-rays produced as falling electrons collide with the Earth's atmosphere.
Particle onslaught can lead to ozone depletion and damage to the orbital satellites that provide us with the navigation, communication, weather and military-recognisance information upon which we have become dependent, researchers said.
These satellites fly through the Van Allen radiation belts - giant concentric layers of charged particles held in place by the Earth's magnetic field.
An increase in particle density and charge brought about by solar activity can raise the level of threat to our critical satellites.
More From This Section
"This is exciting for us because we are integrating data collected by our instruments with the data from NASA's Van Allen Probes," said Robyn Millan, an associate professor of physics and astronomy at the Dartmouth College in US.
Millan uses instruments carried aloft by balloons launched from Antarctica, rising as high as 125,000 feet.
Supported by NASA, the project is called BARREL, an acronym for Balloon Array for Radiation belt Relativistic Electron Losses.
The instruments record the X-rays produced as the falling electrons collide with the atmosphere.
The probes circle the Earth in eccentric orbits around the equator at altitudes of up to 32,000 kilometres.
"Our paper looked at plasma waves," said Millan.
"These are like sound waves in air except that now you are in an ionised gas so the electric and magnetic fields are affected," she said.
Millan describes a solar flare that occurred in January 2014, releasing a burst of solar wind particles that hit and disturbed Earth's magnetic field.
That created a particular kind of wave called "plasmaspheric hiss," examples of which have been observed for decades in the dense plasma region that encircles the Earth in the upper reaches of the atmosphere.
"We concluded that those waves were causing the electrons to be scattered, yielding a new understanding of how the particles are getting kicked into the atmosphere," she said.
The study was published in the journal Nature.