The S phase in the interphase.
Chromosomes are copied in the interphase part of the cell cycle
S phase would be the answer. It is during Interphase (G1, S, G2) that they are copied. SO dependant on your answers it's either interphase or S.
Duplicated chromosomes are present during Metaphase.
Mitosis is a type of cellular division in organisms. The mitotic phases wherein duplicated chromosomes are present are prophase and metaphase.
Chromatins are duplicated in s phase.They are condensed in pro phase.
Chromosomes can be seen during cell divison, Reference Before a cell gets ready to divide by mitosis, each chromosome is duplicated (during S phase of the cell cycle
In the first stage, called interphase, the cell grows and copies its organelles and chromosomes. After each chromosomes is duplicated, the two copies are called chromatids.
It ensures that each newcell will be an exactcopy of its parent cell.
During the S-phase of the cell cycle, chromatids are duplicated. Precise duplication of the chromatids is important in order to prevent genetic abnormalities.
No, in Metaphase the chromosomes align in the center of the cell in association with the spindle fibers, and PREPARE to duplicate during the next phase of Mitosis, which is Anaphhase. The chromosomes are developing to duplicate throughout all phases of mitosis up until Anaphase when the chromosomes split into two and cytokinesis begins to take place so that two new cells will be formed.
Chromosomes can be seen during cell divison, Reference Before a cell gets ready to divide by mitosis, each chromosome is duplicated (during S phase of the cell cycle
During the cell cycle, chromosomes are duplicated during the interphase.
technically the chromosomes copy during interphase right before metaphase I of meiosis I so during Meiosis I the chromosomes are duplicated and not until metaphase II during meiosis II are the sister chromatids separated.
The nucleus of a cell contains uncondensed chromosomes that have been duplicated. During the interphase of the cell cycle, before cell division, the chromosomes replicate and form sister chromatids that are still uncondensed and spread throughout the nucleus.
DNA is replicated during interphase, and chromosomes form or condense during the prophase. So the genes and chromosomes are duplicated at the beginning of mitosis, during the interphase, although you can't see them as chromosomes until the prophase, before the cell splits.
In the first stage, called interphase, the cell grows and copies its organelles and chromosomes. After each chromosomes is duplicated, the two copies are called chromatids.
It ensures that each newcell will be an exactcopy of its parent cell.
During the S-phase of the cell cycle, chromatids are duplicated. Precise duplication of the chromatids is important in order to prevent genetic abnormalities.
The chromosomes are replicated during interphase.
No, in Metaphase the chromosomes align in the center of the cell in association with the spindle fibers, and PREPARE to duplicate during the next phase of Mitosis, which is Anaphhase. The chromosomes are developing to duplicate throughout all phases of mitosis up until Anaphase when the chromosomes split into two and cytokinesis begins to take place so that two new cells will be formed.
If the cell has 8 chromosomes, it should have 8 at the very beginning of mitosis. However during the interphase, specifically the S phase, the chromosomes are duplicated which means that for most of the cell cycle, the cell has 16 chromosomes. However after the cells splits, each daughter cells is left with 8 chromosomes, which is identical to the number of chromosomes in the original parent cell. Hope this helps!
Synthesis occurs during Interphase. During Interphase, the genetic material is present as chromatin, a loosely bundled coil in the nucleus. The chromatin does not condense into chromosomes until Prophase. Thus, you would not see chromosomes during synthesis.