in human being's normal cells 46 chromosomes are found whereas in gametes half of the chromosomes,that is;23 are found if gametes will have same no. of chromosomes as in normal cells than in offspring (46+46=92)chromosomes will be found but it can't happen
It would not be a sex cell. By definition a sex cell has half the number of chromosomes.
The number of chromosomes would double with each generation. This would make it very hard for the chromosomes to line up during mitosis.
They won't. Gametes by definition are haploid while the somatic cells are diploid. i.e. Gametes halve 1/2 the chromosomes as somatic cells.
It would not duplicate because it is not the same.
Gametes have half the number of chromosomes - therefore if the diploid number is 22, the gametes would have 11 chromosomes.
75
I will assume that you mean human cells. Somatic cells are diploid (2n), containing two sets of chromosomes, one of paternal, one of maternal origin. Gametes, on the other hand, are haploid (n), with a single set of chromosomes, ie. half as many as the somatic cell. Now, the haploid chromosome number (n) is characteristic of the species, and in humans this number happens to be 23. Therefore a human gamete has 23 chromosomes, and a human somatic cell 23 pairs, or 46 chromosomes.
All cells within an organism will have the same number of chromosomes, which is the diploid number. The gametes, on the other hand, will have the haploid number of chromosomes.
Since gametes are haploids, they would each contain haploid number of chromosomes, 15 chromosomes.
Depends on what species is in questions - different species have different numbers of chromosomes in gametes.
Gametes have half the number of chromosomes - therefore if the diploid number is 22, the gametes would have 11 chromosomes.
Gametes have haploid chromosomes, which means they have half the number of chromosomes of other cells in the body.
Gametes require half the number of chromosomes of a somatic (regular) cell as gametes are the sex cells. When gametes combine to make a zygote (a fertilised cell), the complete number of chromosomes will be present.
Half the number the monkey hasThe number of chromosomes depends on the species of monkey. So for which ever monkey you are talking about, the gametes that came together to form it each had half the total number the monkey has.
23, there are 23 chromosomes in human gametes
75
I will assume that you mean human cells. Somatic cells are diploid (2n), containing two sets of chromosomes, one of paternal, one of maternal origin. Gametes, on the other hand, are haploid (n), with a single set of chromosomes, ie. half as many as the somatic cell. Now, the haploid chromosome number (n) is characteristic of the species, and in humans this number happens to be 23. Therefore a human gamete has 23 chromosomes, and a human somatic cell 23 pairs, or 46 chromosomes.
Gametes.
All cells within an organism will have the same number of chromosomes, which is the diploid number. The gametes, on the other hand, will have the haploid number of chromosomes.
Since gametes are haploids, they would each contain haploid number of chromosomes, 15 chromosomes.
So that the number of chromossomes of of the next generation don't change. In some living thins they do changed based on generation, such as plants, but in animals that reproduce sexually meiosis has to occur to keep the number of chromosomes of a species constant.