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During mitosis, it is when the cell is in telophase.
Prophase I: chromosomes start to condense and become visibleMetaphase I: homologous chromosomes line up at equatorial plateAnaphase I: homologous chromosomes separate and move to diferent polesTelophase I: one set of chromosomes arrive at each poleProphase II: chromosomes condense againMetaphase II: individual chromosome line up at equatorial plateAnaphase II: centromere divides, and chromosomes (from chromatids) move to different polesTelophase II: one set of chromosome arrive at each pole.
Just before meiosis I there is Interphase I where there is DNA replication, organelle synthesis and an increase in energy stores. Then: Prophase I - Chromatin condenses into chromosomes and there is crossing over of non-sister chromatids, the nuclear membrane disappears, centrioles replicate and move to either pole of the cell. Metaphase I - the pairs of homologous chromosomes move to centre of cell - there is independent assortment. They are held in the centre of the cell by the spindle fibres which are made by the centrioles. Anaphase I - chromosomes are pulled to either pole as spindle fibres contract. The spindle fibres areattached to the centromeres of the chromosomes. Telophase I - the chromosomes reach either pole of the cell, and then there is cytokinesis and cell starts to divide. Prophase II - there is again the disappearance of the nuclear membrane and centrioles move to either pole. Metaphase II - the chromatids line up along equator of cell - again there is independent assortment Anaphase II - the chromatids are pulled to either pole as spindle fibres contract. Telophase II - the chromatids reach either pole, nuclear membrane reforms, and nucleolus reappears. Meiosis is completed! Those are all the stages of meiosis.
More democratic reforms
Solon and Peisistratus.
The nuclear membrane reforms around the nucleus during Telophase, the last phase of mitosis.
This is actually a bio question, but during the final phase, telophase.
In the cell cycle, the nuclear envelope reforms around each cluster of chromosomes in telophase.
telophase
A nuclear membrane forms around the two daughter nuclei, the chromosomes go back to chromatin, the nucleous reforms, the mitotic spindle disappears, and the cytoplasm divides.
actually its nucleolus The nuclear chromatin, first appearing as long threads that shorten and thicken before splitting lengthwise to become two new nuclei. NOOOOOOOOOO. That's mitosis. In interphase, you can't see the chromatin/chromosomes/etc. You can only see the nuclear envelope and nucleolus, which both disappear during mitosis.
it looks like a kitty kat
Mitosis is the process of cell division in which the chromosomes condense and the spindle is assembled. In each phase the chromosomes do different things: prophase: during this first phase of mitosis, the parent chromosomes become compacted and the spindle begins to form creating an X-shape when looked at through a microscope; prometaphase: the nuclear membrane becomes many small vesicles during this phase. The spindle microtubules reach out until they connect the chromosomes to their kinetochore and then a sort of "tug-of-war" happens while the chromosomes bounce between the two poles; metaphase: the chromosomes align along the equator of the cell as they become connected to the spindle poles; anaphase: the chromosomes work their way into becoming individual/independent chromosomes as they begin to find their place near the poles; and telophase: the chromosomes find their poles, the spindle disbands, and each chromosome gets its new nuclear membrane.
To be more accurate the nucleus doesn't split in mitosis because after DNA replicates in interphase and prophase starts nuclear membrane is removed and there is no longer a nucleus just free chromosomes. These separate in anaphase and then in telophase where two daughter cells are going to be produced the nuclear membrane reforms as well as the nucleolus forming two cells with identical nuclei.
a new nucleus forms around each copy of DNA
Telophase is where the cell moves out of mitosis back into interphase. Cytokinesis occurs (if you don't count that as a separate phase); the nuclear membrane reforms; chromosomes return to chromatin; the spindle fibers dissolve and return to the cytoskeleton. It's very similar in meiosis.
During mitosis, it is when the cell is in telophase.