they have one
Anaphase.
During prophase of mitosis, chromosomes condense and become shorter. As mitosis progresses, the condensed chromosomes move to the center of the cell and eventually separate during anaphase.
anaphase
the spindle fibers
The phase of mitosis when the chromosomes stop moving is called metaphase. During metaphase, the chromosomes align at the center of the cell along the metaphase plate before moving to separate poles during anaphase.
Anaphase is the phase of mitosis where sister chromatids separate and move towards opposite poles of the cell. This marks the transition from the duplicated chromosome state to individual chromosomes.
during metaphase and anaphase
Chromosomes split into two poles during the anaphase stage of mitosis. This separation ensures that each daughter cell receives the correct number of chromosomes.
Anaphase is the stage of mitosis where chromosomes split apart. During anaphase, the sister chromatids are pulled towards opposite poles of the cell by the spindle fibers. This separation ensures that each resulting daughter cell receives a full set of chromosomes.
During mitosis, in the stage of telophase daughter chromosomes arrive at the poles. Daughter chromosomes begin their travel to the end poles in the stage of anaphase.
Can't reproduce unless exactly half. (Offspring will be genetically deformed.)
The phase of mitosis where the cell contains four chromosomes is known as metaphase. During metaphase, the chromosomes align along the metaphase plate in the center of the cell before being separated into two sets during anaphase.