In the nucleus.
Chromosomes are composed of two chromatids during the prophase and metaphase of mitosis. The chromosomes of formed in prophase and line up in metaphase.
The chromatids line up at the equator of the cell during the metaphase of meiosis. After which the chromatids separate to form individual chromosomes.
metaphase. C:
The stage of mitosis when the chromatids are visible is the metaphase stage. During metaphase, the duplicated chromosomes line up along the center of the cell, with their chromatids attached to the spindle fibers.
Metaphase I or Metaphase II? In metaphase I it would have 24. In metaphase II it would have 6.
Chromatids line up during the metaphase of the cell cycle.
In Metaphase the chromatids line up at the equator/midplane of the cell.
Sister chromatids are visible during metaphase of mitosis, where they align along the metaphase plate in the center of the cell. This is when the chromosomes are most condensed and easily visible under a microscope.
In mitosis, chromatids line up in the middle of the cell during metaphase. This alignment ensures that, during anaphase, the chromatids can be separated and pulled to opposite poles of the cell, ensuring each daughter cell receives an identical set of chromosomes.
The chromatids can first be seen under a light microscope during the metaphase stage of mitosis, when they line up along the cell's equator.
During metaphase, a human cell will have 46 chromosomes, as humans have a diploid number of chromosomes. Each chromosome is replicated, resulting in a total of 92 sister chromatids, with each chromosome consisting of two identical sister chromatids joined at the centromere.
During Mitosis, the spindle pulls apart the sister chromatids of the chromosome in the Anaphase stage.