New Q. Answer is Yes. Remember, eukaryotic chromosomes exist in pairs.
Ex-Q. Answer was: about meiosis and mitosis I will answer both:
Mitosis is a form of cell division that results in the produced (or daughter) cells having the same number of chromosomes as the parent. In your example, a daughter cell resulting from mitotic cell division would have 23 chromosome pairs, just like its parent cell.
Meiosis is a form of cell division that results in the produced (or daughter) cells having half the number of chromosomes present in the parent. In your example, a daughter cell resulting from meiotic cell division would have 23 chromosomes, half the number of the parent cell.
Each daughter cell has 46 chromosomes, or you can say 23 pairs of chromosomes.
Each daughter cell has 46 chromosomes, or you can say 23 pairs of chromosomes.
After mitosis each daughter cell contains 46 chromosomes as the DNA replicates itself before the cell divides
iht should have 10 since 20 divided by 2 is 10
One Cell has 10 chromosomes, it divides into 5 chromosomes. So at the end it has, 5 chromosomes. Your Welcome for the answer! ^_^
Cytokinesis is when the cytoplasm divides two daughter cells and forms the same number of chromosomes as a parent
Each daughter cell has 46 chromosomes, or you can say 23 pairs of chromosomes.
Each daughter cell has 46 chromosomes, or you can say 23 pairs of chromosomes.
Each daughter cell has 46 chromosomes, or you can say 23 pairs of chromosomes.
After mitosis each daughter cell contains 46 chromosomes as the DNA replicates itself before the cell divides
iht should have 10 since 20 divided by 2 is 10
One Cell has 10 chromosomes, it divides into 5 chromosomes. So at the end it has, 5 chromosomes. Your Welcome for the answer! ^_^
Mitosis is the scientific term for nuclear cell division, where the nucleus of the cell divides, resulting in two sets of identical chromosomes. Mitosis is accompanied by cytokinesis in which the end result is two completely separate cells called daughter cells. There are four phases of mitosis: prophase, metaphase, anaphase and telophase.
cell division
In eukaryotes, there are two distinct types of cell division: a vegetative division, whereby each daughter cell is genetically identical to the parent cell (mitosis), and a reproductive cell division, whereby the number of chromosomes in the daughter cells is reduced by half to produce haploid gametes (meiosis).
In mitosis, the daughter cells each have the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
Meiosis 1 is called a reduction division because it reduces the number of chromosomes from diploid to haploid. This division results in the production of gametes.