Metaphase II
In Metaphase I, the tetrads of homologous chromosomes line up along the equator, but they are not individual chromosomes.
metaphase 2
In Metaphase the chromatids line up at the equator/midplane of the cell.
Metaphase
The equator is the line of zero degrees latitude.
Phase to Phase voltageCorrection to the above answer:There is no such thing as a 'phase-to-phase' or 'phase-to-ground' voltage. The correct terms are 'line-to-line' (or 'line voltage') and 'line-to-ground' (or 'phase voltage'). Transmission-line voltages are line-to-line (or 'line') voltages.
The chromatids line up at the equator of the cell during the metaphase of meiosis. After which the chromatids separate to form individual chromosomes.
During Mitosis, the spindle pulls apart the sister chromatids of the chromosome in the Anaphase stage.
Chromosomes are composed of two chromatids during the prophase and metaphase of mitosis. The chromosomes of formed in prophase and line up in metaphase.
DNA replication occurrs through a process called mitosis. The stages of mitosis are (I)PMAT.InterphaseIn the G1 phase, protein synthesis occurrs and mRNA runs along the chromosomes. In the S phase, DNA polymerase runs along the chromosomes/chromatids and creates complementary strands of DNA. In the G2 phase, the 23 chromosomes all have sister chromatids.2. Prophase- Chromosomes condense, spindle fibers form, and the nuclear membrane disintegrates. (23 chromosomes/46 chromatids)3. Metaphase- the chromosomes line up in the middle of the cell and spindle fibers from the centrioles connect to the chromosomes at the kinetochores. (23 chromosomes/46 chromatids)4. Anaphase- Sister chromatids are pulled apart by the spindle fibers to each pole of the cell. (23 chromosomes/46 chromatids)5. Telophase- nuclear envolopes form around the chromatids at each pole, the spindle fibers reduce, the chromatids decondense. (46 chromosomes/ 46 chromatids)Then cytokinesis occurrs to split up the cell into two cells.
This phase is called the metaphase. Remember' M' for middle and 'M' for metaphase. In the next phase (anaphase) the chromosomes move away from each other: remember 'A' for away. Telophase is the last or 'terminal' phase: remember 'T' for terminal. Prophase occurs prior to (ie before) the other phases: remember 'P' for prior. Interphase is in between cells divisions: remember 'I' for in between. Clear answer is metaphase.
A divide.
No, the equater is just an imaginary line.
metaphase 2
Chromatids line up during the metaphase of the cell cycle.
In Metaphase the chromatids line up at the equator/midplane of the cell.
Chromatids line up during the metaphase of the cell cycle.
the equater.