28
If the diploid number in a liver cell is 52, this means the organism has 52 chromosomes in total, with 26 pairs. The egg cell, being a haploid cell, will contain half the diploid number. Therefore, the egg of this organism will have 26 chromosomes.
Yes, that is correct. If an organism has 16 chromosomes in its egg cells, its diploid number would be 32. This means that in its somatic cells, which are diploid, it would have 32 chromosomes, with each chromosome having a pair.
23
I have the same queston
No, that statement is incorrect. Egg and sperm each contain half the number of chromosomes as the parent organism. When they fuse during fertilization, they combine to create a new cell with the full set of chromosomes.
Gametes have half the number of chromosomes that most cells in the organism have. Most human cells have 46 chromosomes, but eggs and sperm have 23 chromosomes each.
depends on the organism, but (i think) it should be half the normal number of chromosomes in a normal cell, because the gametes (egg and sperm) are haploid cells, meaning they have half the number because when they fuse together in fertilisation they need to have the correct amount of chromosomes so that they can duplicate and grow into an embryo.
it has two sets of chromosomes
An unfertilized egg would be 1N...so the organism that has a 2N number of 52 would have a 1N number of 26.
If an egg cell contains 50 chromosomes, then a sperm cell from the same species would also contain 50 chromosomes, as both egg and sperm cells are haploid and contain half the number of chromosomes of the diploid organism. Therefore, when they combine during fertilization, they restore the diploid number, which would be 100 chromosomes in this case.
The number of chromosomes found in either and egg of sperm is half the number of chromosomes found in a normal cell of the organism. For example, if you are thinking of a human sperm or egg cell is would be 23 chromosomes, since the normal human cell has 46.
23 chromosomes