Somatic cells.
Somatic cells would be the general term describing the type of cells undergoing mitosis in a human. These are the any cells in the body that are not specialized for reproduction and undergo mitosis for growth, repair, and maintenance.
I believe the answer you're looking for is 'eukaryotic', because mitosis happens only in cells with a nucleus.Actually, mitosis happens in all cells of the human body except for ova, sperm, neurons, and cardiac muslces.
all cells perform mitosis, except sex cells which perform meiosis
Brain and Nerve cells
Mitosis in plants cells is faster than in human cell because more localisated. When a human cell do mitosis as a part of all of her life cycle, a meristematic plant cell do only mitosis, without interphasis. So it is faster for plants to do mitosis
Yes, human embryos grow larger through mitosis. Mitosis is the process through which cells divide to produce two identical daughter cells, each with the same genetic material. During embryonic development, mitosis allows for the proliferation of cells and the growth of the embryo.
46
23 pairs
The type of cells that do not undergo mitosis are the cells in the human body that are considered to be terminally differentiated, such as nerve cells and muscle cells. These cells have exited the cell cycle and do not divide further.
There are 46 chromesomes, after mitosis, those cells duplicate. That means there are 92 chromesomes.
yes.
No, human cells divide by mitosis and meiosis.