No, a sperm cell and a cheek cell do not have the same chromosomes. A sperm cell is a haploid cell containing 23 chromosomes, while a cheek cell is a somatic cell with 46 chromosomes, which is diploid.
A sperm cell contains 23 [unpaired] chromosomes.
Twenty-three chromosomes are in a cell that is formed from a sperm and egg cell.
Each sperm cell will contain n chromosomes, which is half the number of chromosomes in the original cell.
A sperm cell will have 23 chromosomes, half the number found in a somatic cell. So, if there are 13 pairs of homologous chromosomes in the parental cell, there would be 26 chromosomes in the parental cell, but the sperm cell would have 23 individual chromosomes.
In both an egg cell and a sperm cell, there are 23 chromosomes. The sperm and egg unite (fertilize) to create a zygote (fertilized egg). A zygote has 46 chromosomes. This is important because if a sperm and/or an egg cell have 1 more or 1 less chromosome, a mutation could form in the zygote.
Sperm cell, as it's haploid (23 chromosomes) as opposed to diploid (46 chromosomes).
A gibbon sperm cell typically contains 24 chromosomes, as gibbons have a diploid number of 48 chromosomes in their somatic cells. During fertilization, the sperm cell combines with an egg cell to form a new cell with the full complement of 48 chromosomes.
23
A dog sperm cell typically contains 39 chromosomes, which is half the number of chromosomes found in a normal dog cell. When a sperm cell fertilizes an egg cell, the resulting zygote will have a full set of 78 chromosomes.
A fox has a diploid number of 50, meaning that in every cell there are 50 chromosomes. Thus, the haploid sperm cell only has 25 chromosomes.
It has 23 chromosomes.