it compares by 50% or by half of chromosomes because there are 23 sex cells and 46 chromosomes
Chromosomes are the form of DNA during mitosis.
In Mitosis, the chromosomes duplicate themselves. In Meiosis 1, they duplicate, however they do not duplicate in meiosis 2.
The chromatin in the cell becomes chromosomes in prophase, the first stage of mitosis. The chromatin coils tightly together to form into separate chromosome strands during this phase.
it compares by 50% or by half of chromosomes because there are 23 sex cells and 46 chromosomes
There is no change in chromosome number. Just in the amount of chromatids. Because during synthesis each chromosome doubles and becomes sister chromatids.
All chromosomes are reproduced during mitosis.
During mitosis a double-stranded chromosome attaches to a spindle fiber centromere.
Chromosomes are the form of DNA during mitosis.
In the beginning of mitosis the number of chromosomes double. But since during mitosis the chromosomes are divided between the two daughter cells the number of chromosomes at the end is the same number as the beginning before doubling.
In Mitosis, the chromosomes duplicate themselves. In Meiosis 1, they duplicate, however they do not duplicate in meiosis 2.
Chromosomes are duplicated before mitisis in S phase of inter phase .
During mitosis, the fibers of each individual chromosome are drawn together forming the tightly packed nucleosomes. The tight packing of nucleosomes may help separate chromosomes during mitosis.
The chromatin in the cell becomes chromosomes in prophase, the first stage of mitosis. The chromatin coils tightly together to form into separate chromosome strands during this phase.
It is beneficial in the replication of DNA. During this period of Mitosis two copies of each chromosome are produced.
what guides the chromosomes movement during mitosis
Chromosomes can be seen during cell divison, Reference Before a cell gets ready to divide by mitosis, each chromosome is duplicated (during S phase of the cell cycle
Before mitosis begins, the cell replicates its chromosomes (so the chromosome number doubles). Then during/after mitosis the cell splits in half - so each daughter cell produced by mitosis has the same chromosome number as the original cell.