There are two cells in prophase II.
Somewhere right around 1%
Meiosis 1: Prophase 1, Metaphase1, Anaphase 1, Telophase 1. Meiosis 2: Prophase 1, Metaphase 2, Anaphase 2, Telophase 2. Makes 4 daughter cells that contain 4 chromosomes each.
During prophase of mitosis, the number of cells remains constant. Prophase is the first stage of mitosis where the nucleus condenses and the chromosomes become visible, but the cell itself does not divide yet.
Yes, it does, only it is called prophase 2 or prophase II.
prophase
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
Interphase Prophase 1 Metaphase 1 Anaphase 1 Telophase 1 Cytokinesis 1 Prophase 2 Metaphase 2 Anaphase 2 Telophase 2 Cytokinesis 2
Well if you're talking about mitosis, the differences are insignificant. If you're talking about meiosis, then the differences is that DNA replication only occurs prior to prophase 1 and does not occur prior to prophase 2 in order to produce haploid gamete cells, rather than diploid somatic cells. I hope this was detailed enough. There are more differences, but I doubt you need to know them, based on your question.
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).
Prophase- during prophase, chromatids shorten and thicken, nucleoli disappears, spindle fibers form and centrioles in animal cells move to opposite ends.
Somatic cells go through four phases of mitosis: prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase. The entire process typically lasts about 1-2 hours in most mammalian cells.
Meiosis consists of two main stages: Meiosis I and Meiosis II. In Meiosis I, homologous chromosomes separate, resulting in two haploid cells. In Meiosis II, sister chromatids separate, resulting in four haploid cells.