If you are talking about mitosis, then for a typical eukaryotic cell, after mitosis, each daughter cell will contain the same amount of chromosomes as the parent cell (ie. 2n --> two 2n cells.) If you are talking about meiosis, then each will contain half the chromosomes as the parent cell (ie. 2n --> four n cells)
10 chromosomes; the chromosomes duplicate before cell division
half of the parent cell. How many that is depends on cell type. If a cell usually has 40, it will divide at around 80 creating two with 40 each.
Half the number in other human cells, that is 23. There is one chromosome from each of the 23 pairs in most other human cells.
Always the same number as the parent cell,
Both daughter cells will contain the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
6
52
Chromosomes doubles during the S phase of inter-phase, which occurs before Mitosis. During the process of mitoses cell divides into 2 daughter cells from a single parent hence, before mitoses cells must duplicate so that each new cell has a sufficient set of genetic material.
When a body cell reproduces, the purpose is to produce daughter cells that are genetically identical to the parent cell. Before mitosis, the DNA in the parent cell replicates, resulting in a doubling of the chromosomes. Mitosis separates the chromosomes into two new nuclei, identical to the parent cell. Then the cell divides by cytokinesis, producing two identical daughter cells, each with the same number of chromosomes as each other and the parent cell.
Each daughter cell will have 4 chromosomes. A parent cell is diploid and 2N, therefore N=4 for the parent cell because it has 8 chromosomes. After meiosis, a daughter cell is N and therefore has 4 chromosomes.
They would each have 52. When a cell divides through mitosis, it copies the original chromosomes, pulls them apart so that there is a copy of the same set of chromosomes on each side of the cell, then divides. The original set of chromosomes will always be the exact same set as the daughter cell's set of chromosomes (unless something went horribly wrong.) -if you are on a worksheet called "Section 1 Reinforcement - Cell Division and Mitosis" for number 8, I'm in the same situation...
False. Each daughter cell would have 16 chromosomes just like the parent cell after mitosis.
I believe 5 chromosomes because it's splitting evenly between 2 new cells. And of course the cell is smaller, but they both receive half of the DNA of the parent cell if that makes sense.
I believe 5 chromosomes because it's splitting evenly between 2 new cells. And of course the cell is smaller, but they both receive half of the DNA of the parent cell if that makes sense.
Mitosis is the process a single cell divides into two diploid cells. Each cell has the same amount and quality of chromosomes as the parent cell.
Chromosomes doubles during the S phase of inter-phase, which occurs before Mitosis. During the process of mitoses cell divides into 2 daughter cells from a single parent hence, before mitoses cells must duplicate so that each new cell has a sufficient set of genetic material.
In mitosis, the daughter cells each have the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
When a body cell reproduces, the purpose is to produce daughter cells that are genetically identical to the parent cell. Before mitosis, the DNA in the parent cell replicates, resulting in a doubling of the chromosomes. Mitosis separates the chromosomes into two new nuclei, identical to the parent cell. Then the cell divides by cytokinesis, producing two identical daughter cells, each with the same number of chromosomes as each other and the parent cell.
Each daughter cell will have 4 chromosomes. A parent cell is diploid and 2N, therefore N=4 for the parent cell because it has 8 chromosomes. After meiosis, a daughter cell is N and therefore has 4 chromosomes.
No. Due to DNA replication before mitosis, each daughter cell receives the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. So if the parent cell has 38 chromosomes, the daughter cells will have 38 chromosomes.
8 from each parent.
Each parent sex cell gives 23 chromosomes to their offspring in humans
Telomeres.
After meiosis, each daughter cell has half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell. For example, in humans the parent cell would have 46 chromosomes, but after meiotic cell division, the daughter cells will each have 23 chromosomes.