Want this question answered?
The chromosomes of an autopolyploid individual come from the same species, whereas an allopolyploid individual has sets of chromosomes from different species.
Limestone and marble are both soft enough to be carved into chess pieces and commonly are.
For example, chimpanzees have 48 chromosomes, humans have 46. Are there any animal species (or plant or other species for that matter) which has some individuals with some number of chromosomes, and some individuals with another number of chromosomes. Not including genetic conditions such as Down's Syndrome. * in some insects the males and the females have a different number (usually the male has half but not always) they are called haploodiploid * in plants different parts of the plants life cycle will have different ploidia (2 sets, 3 sets) * but the closest to what you are looking for is fungi in which each organism and sometimes different cells in the same organism have random numbers of chromosoms
Essentially yes, the sun always rises in the east and sets in the west.
A 1n cell is a haploid cell, posessing one copy of each chromosome for that species. N=the number of different chromosomes present, 1=the number of sets of chromosomes.
The ratio is the same as the ratio between the number of teeth.
It is possible for two sets of data - not ALL of which are the same - to have the same measures of central tendency. However, if the two sets do have a mode, then that number must appear in both sets ... several times.
The cardinality of finite sets are the number of elements included in them however, union of infinite sets can be different as it includes the matching of two different sets one by one and finding a solution by matching the same amount of elements in those sets.
Equivalent sets are sets with exactly the same number of elements.
No.
No.
There is no such number since the two sets are the same.
Equivalent sets are sets with exactly the same number of elements.
If the set is of finite order, that is, it has a finite number of elements, n, then the number of subsets is 2n.
yes
SETS
Yes.