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One cell divides into two in a process called mitosis. Mitosis produces two genetically identical “daughter” cells from a single parent cell. Another type of cell division, meiosis, creates four daughter cells that are genetically distinct from one another and from the original parent cell.
Mitosis results in the production of two daughter cells from a single parent cell. The daughter cells are identical to one another and to the original parent cell.
Cell division is the process in which cells self-replicate to produce two daughter cells identical to one another and the original cell. Cell replication is what makes you grow!
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In a typical somatic cell, mitosis produces one diploid "daughter" cell from one diploid parent cell. In a gametic cell, meiosis produces 4 haploid "daughter" cells from one diploid parent cell.
Stoichiometry uses coefficient ratios to relate moles of one molecule to moles of another
Daughter cells are a part of mitosis (asexual cell division). They are formed in Telophase when the cell plate forms and creates two separate cells called daughter cells. In mitosis, each daughter cell is identical to the "mother cell" (original cell).
Stoichiometry uses coefficient ratios to relate moles of one molecule to moles of another
Stoichiometry uses coefficient ratios to relate moles of one molecule to moles of another
Another cell, identical to the one that began the process of dividing.
One daughter cell with double the DNA of parent cell
daughter cell