Prophase
Prophase.
No, interphase is part of the cell cycle and has nothing to do with mitosis, where the nucleus divides.
Cell division is complete after cytokinesis in which the cytoplasm is divided and there are two complete cells. A cell may enter a period that they will not divide and may never again which is in the Gap 1 phase. It takes certain enzymes to push the cell into S phase and therefore divide again.
Interphase takes the longest to complete
Strictly speaking, the chromosomes are not copied during mitosis but already before cell division takes place. This phase is called INTERPHASE and is again divided into three phases, G1 (first gap), S (synthesis), and G2 (second gap). The replication of chromosomes only happens in the S phase.
Prophase.
When the cell prepares for mitosis, takes inventory and makes sure it is ready to continue with mitosis
When the cell prepares for mitosis, takes inventory and makes sure it is ready to continue with mitosis
When the cell prepares for mitosis, takes inventory and makes sure it is ready to continue with mitosis
It takes place in inter phase. It is the S phase
A complete cardiac cycle.
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of interphase, which is the phase that precedes mitosis. In this phase, the DNA molecules in the cell's nucleus are duplicated, resulting in two identical copies of each chromosome.
No, interphase is part of the cell cycle and has nothing to do with mitosis, where the nucleus divides.
M stands for mitotic cycle and mitosis and, usually, cytokinesis takes place in this phase. Edited answer: M stands for both mitosis as well as meiosis. It denotes the nuclear division taking place mitotically or meiotically.
Cell division is complete after cytokinesis in which the cytoplasm is divided and there are two complete cells. A cell may enter a period that they will not divide and may never again which is in the Gap 1 phase. It takes certain enzymes to push the cell into S phase and therefore divide again.
Interphase takes the longest to complete
Metaphase is the stage of mitosis in which the all of the cell's chromosomes align along the equator of the cell. It is the final stage before the cell splits into two daughter cells.