A daughter cell and its parent cell are exact copies of each other.
the daughter cells' chromosomes are a identical to the parent cell. they each have a complete set
they r identical
The two daughter cells that result from mitosis are diploid just like the parent cell. The daughter cells have the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. In meiosis, 4 daughter cells result each with half the number of chromosomes that the parent cell had and are therefore called haploid.
The ratio of DNA in a daughter cell after mitosis is 2:1. Mitosis produces two daughter cells that are identical to the parent cell.
The daughter cells have the same # of chromosomes & the same amount of DNA
This process is called cell division or mitosis.
False. Each daughter cell would have 16 chromosomes just like the parent cell after mitosis.
The daughter cell has the same number of chromosomes and half the amount of DNA
after mitosis the daughter cells are exactly identical to the original cell
The original cell is the parent cell and the cell split through mitosis is the daughter cell.
Mitosis is used to produce daughter cells that are genetically identical to the parent cells. The cell copies - or 'replicates' - its chromosomes, and then splits the copied chromosomes equally to make sure that each daughter cell has a full set.
Mitosis results into two genetically identical daughter cells as the parent cell.