they separate they become 2 new cells and their the same in chromesomes.
Chromatids separate during cell division ie anaphase of mitosis and anaphase 2 of meiosis.
The centrioles move apart to opposite ends of the cell, the chromosomes become attached to the fiber connected to centrioles pulling the chromatids apart; when this is over all the chromatids line up.
The phases found in both meiosis and mitosis are prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase. In meiosis, there are two rounds of division (meiosis I and meiosis II), while mitosis only involves one round of division.
Sister chromatids separate during Anaphase II of meiosis.*They are pulled apart and then start moving to opposite sides of the cell.
The Anaphase stage of Mitosis. The proteins that bind the sister chromatids are split so they become seperated. Then the centromeres, along with the attached chromosomes, start to be pulled apart towards opposite ends of the cell.
In anaphase for both types of cell division, the centromeres of each chromosome separates and the spindle fibers pull apart the sister chromosomes. In mitosis, this is the shortest phase of cell division.However, the differences between mitosis and meiosis are different. Because meiosis is when chromosomes are "mixed and matched" in order to make new different combinations, the strands are only mixed up so when they split, they have new genes at their ends. Because mitosis is when chromosomes are duplicated, or cloned, and are copies of each other, when they split, the new cell is the exact same copy as the original.
Anaphase. My old biology teacher used to say you could remember it because the chromatids look like hands of bananas when they're being pulled apart. Banana sounds sort of like the 'ana' bit of anaphase if you pronounce it funny.
Meiosis is the division of the gametes(sex cells), haploid (n) Mitosis is cell division, diploid (2n) In meiosis, there are the similar cycles (prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase), but there are two cycles of each (ex: prophase 1, prophase 2 ETC).
a. chromatids do not separate at the centromere in anaphase I. b. centromeres do not exist in anaphase I. c. crossing-over occurs only in anaphase of miitosis
The steps to Meiosis are ;~ Prophase 1~ Metaphase 1~ Anaphase 1~ Telephase 1~ Prophase 2~ Metaphase 2~ Anaphase 2~ Telephase 2
It depends on whether you're talking about mitosis or meiosis. In mitosis, it is during anaphase. In meiosis, where the cell divides twice, centromeres aren't separated until anaphase II. In anaphase I, chromosomes are arranged as tetrads, and these tetrads are pulled apart to create two daughter cells, each with a full copy of the original cells' diploid chromosome.
well in meiosis one the chromosomes form a tetrad and do a cross overso i say its in anaphase 2