They are called poles, for example in anaphase chromosomes are pulled to the opposite poles of the cell.
The opposite ends of a cell are called poles. The poles play an important part of the processes of mitosis and meiosis.
spindle fibers
The walls are known as cell walls.
A molecule with opposite charges at opposite ends is said to be a polar molecule. All such molecules are water soluble.
A lack of balance in the charge at opposite ends of a structure is called a polar molecule or an ionic compound depending on the component elements.
I am not 100% sure but i think its clustered and dispersed
The decomposition of any nutrient is called hydrolysis, in which a molecule of water is broken and "caps" the ends of the two monomers. The opposite of hydrolysis is called a condensation (or dehydration) reaction.
A polar molecule doesn't necessarily have any overall charge. All polar means is that one part of the molecule has a negative charge and another part of the same molecule has a positive charge. These charges balance. When the charges don't balance and there is a net charge, it is referred to as an ion. An example of a polar molecule is fluoro-methane, or CH3F. The fluorine attracts the electrons in the bond a lot harder than carbon. so the fluorine has a negative charge while the carbon atom ends up with a positive charge.
The opposite ends of a magnet are called poles. All magnets have them.
The paired chromosomes separate at the kinetochores and move to opposite sides of the cell. This occurs at anaphase.
divide and move to opposite ends of the cell
The chromosomes pull apart and are pulled toward opposite ends of the cell during anaphase.
A molecule whose ends have opposite electric charges is called a polar molecule.
Centrioles
anaphase
Ron is observing an onion cell on a slide under a microscope. He sees chromatids being pulled to opposite ends of the cell. Which phase is he seeing?
The centromeres split. The two chromatids separate, and each chromatid becomes a new chromosome. The new chromosomes move to opposite ends of the cell. The cell stretches out as the opposite ends are pushed apart.
Metaphase
Polarpolar
In anaphase, the paired chromosomes separate and begin moving to opposite ends of the cell.