This process is called radiative recombination.
Crossing over is a basic concept of genetics and cell biology, often called recombination.
These processes are called unbalanced recombination.
About 300,000 years after this event, atoms of hydrogen and helium began to form, in an event called recombination.
This wholesale shuffling of the genetic deck is called recombination and is a principal reason that children differ from their parents.
( Going from a plasma to a gas would be called recombination of the electrons and ions to become neutral atoms.)
Genetically, the process is called recombination.
The process is called homologous recombination.
This process is called recombination and the photon's energy is released as heat.
The next step is to generate a second generation population of solutions from those selected through genetic operators: crossover (also called recombination), and/or mutation.