It depends on the cell. If the cell is a non sex cell, the daughter cell has 46 chromosomes, if it a human cell.
If it is a gamete, it has 23, half the number of the parent cell. This is in a human as well.
If a parent cell has 8 chromosomes (that is 4 pairs of chromosomes), after meiosisand each daughter cell will have one member of each pair or in other words, 4 chromosmes.
There are always two. (As with twins!)
The number of chromosomes that are represented by eight sister chromatids would be four. This is because two chromatids make one chromosome.
four sister chromatids
2
Tetrad
Daughter cells produced by mitosis and cytokinesis have the same number of chromosomes as the original cell. Daughter cells resulting from meiosis and cytokinesis have half the number of chromosomes as the original cell.
Half the number that were in the original cell.
Mitosis always yields the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. In humans, 23.
The daughter cells in meiosis have half the number of sets of chromosomes compared to the parent cell. This means that in humans, the daughter cells would have 23 pairs of chromosomes instead of the 46 pairs in the parent cell.
34 Mitosis followed by cytokinesis produces genetically identical daughter cells.
Daughter cells produced by mitosis and cytokinesis have the same number of chromosomes as the original cell. Daughter cells resulting from meiosis and cytokinesis have half the number of chromosomes as the original cell.
The new cell will have the same number of chromosomes as the original cell.
Half the number that were in the original cell.
52 - mitosis produces daughter cells with exactly the same chromosomes of the original cell.
Half of the original
Each daughter cell will have 52 chromosomes. This is because mitosis produces daughter cells which are genetically identical to the parent cell. Therefore they will have the same number of chromosomes.
They would each have 52. When a cell divides through mitosis, it copies the original chromosomes, pulls them apart so that there is a copy of the same set of chromosomes on each side of the cell, then divides. The original set of chromosomes will always be the exact same set as the daughter cell's set of chromosomes (unless something went horribly wrong.) -if you are on a worksheet called "Section 1 Reinforcement - Cell Division and Mitosis" for number 8, I'm in the same situation...
There are going to be half the amount of the original chromosomes that were in each cell to begin with. So therefore there are going to be 4 chromosomes in each daughter cell at the end of mitosis..Actually there will be 2 chromosomes, in each daughter cell at the end of mitosis!
Mitosis always yields the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. In humans, 23.
Half the number of its original cell
This is speaking in terms of MITOSIS.A typical human cell has 46 chromosomes. Each offspring cell receives anidentical copy of the original cell's chromosomes. So the two daughter cells will have 46 chromosomes each as well.
After mitotic cell division, if the parent cell had 52 chromosomes, the daughter cells will also have 52 chromosomes identical to each other and the parent cell.