23 haploid sex cells
23 pairs
Humans have 23 chromosomes in each cell
Many scientists think the 24th chromosome fused together and that is why humans have 23.
No. The human cell has 23 chromosome pairs (total 46 chromosomes). Each chromosome has many genes.
There are 46 chromosomes per cell, with 22 pairs and an XX pair for females or an XY pair for males.
A human cell typically contains 23 pairs of chromosomes, for a total of 46 chromosomes.
Normally in a cell, there are 92 chromatids, 2 per chromosome. However, when the chromosomes have duplicated before mitosis, there are twice as many, or 184.
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23
The number of genes varies from chromosome to chromosome and the number of chromosomes varies from species to species (from as few as 1 single chromosome per cell to as many 30,000 chromosome pairs per cell). Human cells have 23 chromosome pairs per cell.
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In humans, the parent cell undergoing meiosis has 46 chromosomes, which is the diploid number (2n). During meiosis, this diploid cell divides to produce four haploid gametes, each containing 23 chromosomes (n). This reduction in chromosome number is crucial for maintaining the species' chromosome count through sexual reproduction.