When the mitotic cycle is completed, they look pretty much identical.
Daughter cells produced by mitosis and cytokinesis have the same number of chromosomes as the original cell. Daughter cells resulting from meiosis and cytokinesis have half the number of chromosomes as the original cell.
A meiotic division produces four daughter cells.
Daughter cells are the result of either meiosis or mitosis. :)
a new cell formed after cell division is called a daughter cell
After cell division is complete, two daughter cells are formed. Each daughter cell contains an identical set of genetic material as the original parent cell.
after mitosis the daughter cells are exactly identical to the original cell
Daughter cells are typically diploid after cell division.
Yes, cell division can increase the mass of the original cell as it duplicates cellular components and synthesizes new components to form new daughter cells. However, the overall mass is distributed between the two daughter cells, so each individual daughter cell might not be bigger than the original cell.
The process of cell division is likely occurring. This could be mitosis, which produces two daughter cells with the same number of chromosomes as the original cell, or meiosis, which produces four daughter cells with half the number of chromosomes as the original cell (e.g., for sexual reproduction).
The type of cell division that produces daughter cells is MEIOSIS.
Daughter cells are a part of mitosis (asexual cell division). They are formed in Telophase when the cell plate forms and creates two separate cells called daughter cells. In mitosis, each daughter cell is identical to the "mother cell" (original cell).
The genes in daughter cells produced by mitosis are the same as the genes in the original cell. Mitosis is a process of cell division where the genetic material is replicated and evenly distributed between the daughter cells, ensuring that they have an identical genetic makeup to the original cell.