The two cells created in mitosis are referred to as centrioles.
Identical daughter cells are created through the process of mitosis, which involves the division of a parent cell into two genetically identical daughter cells. During mitosis, the chromosomes are duplicated and then segregated equally into the two daughter cells.
After cytokinesis, there are two cells.
Telophase
the two new cells are called daughter cells.
Mitosis is the cell cycle phase wherein the cell nucleus chromosomes are separated. After mitosis, two identical cells will be created.
Mitosis followed by cytokinesis results in two identical daughter cells.
2 diploid cells
The cytoplasmic division is referred to as cytokinesis. It is the final stage of cell division where the cytoplasm of the cell is divided into two daughter cells following the separation of the nucleus.
Mitosis results in two cells. There are two daughter cells that are formed. These two cell are identical to the parent cells.
Mitosis followed by cytokinesis produces two daughter cells.
Two cells. Mitosis is when a cell splits, so it ends with two.
Meiosis is most accurately referred to as nuclear division because it involves two rounds of division that result in four daughter cells with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell. Mitosis is a single division process that results in two daughter cells with the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.