yes it is, in mitosis, a cell with a diploid number (2n) of chromosomes eg 46, will produce daughter cell of equal nd diploid number of chromosomes(46)
By uniform replication of DNA and division of centomeres, the daughter nuclei receive the same number of chromosomes.
nuclearIt is the division of the nucleus. Here the chromosomal number is not changed.
No. The cells must undergo mitosis and multiply themselves in order for any organism to grow. The size of the cell does not change. Only the quantity of them do.
Mitosis followed by cytokinesis results in two identical daughter cells.
Mitosis stays diploid throughout. The first part of Meiosis- Meiosis I- is diploid, but after Telophase 1 it becomes haploid throughout Meiosis II. Source: College student in Bio 2: Book using is "Biology"; 8th Edition; Campbell/Reece
By uniform replication of DNA and division of centomeres, the daughter nuclei receive the same number of chromosomes.
nuclearIt is the division of the nucleus. Here the chromosomal number is not changed.
So they can surviveThey are important in increasing number of cells. It maintains chromosomal number
No. Mitosis produces identical daughter cells - same DNA and same amount. Only in meiosis does the chromosome number halve.
Two Daughter CellsThey have unchanged chromosomal number. They are identical nucleii
No. The cells must undergo mitosis and multiply themselves in order for any organism to grow. The size of the cell does not change. Only the quantity of them do.
Meiosis works to produce gametes, not mitosis.
Gametes don't undergo Meiosis, but are CREATED in Meiosis.Gametes should be haploid. Otherwise chromosomal number will be doubled in offspring
Mitosis is cell division in which the chromosome number stays the same. Although at some points throughout the cell cycle, chromosomes may consist of two sister chromatids
Mitosis followed by cytokinesis results in two identical daughter cells.
Diploid cells are cells with full chromosomal number.Haploids are with half chromosomal number.
Ya