the two halves of a doubled chromosome structure are called?
A somatic cell with two of each type of chromosome has a diploid chromosome number. This means that the cell has a complete set of chromosomes, one from each parent.
If you mean haploid, as in half of each chromosome, or containing only one chromatid from each full chromosome, thenthe cell is called haploid.
Mitosis results in two identical cells being produced from the original cell. A copy of each chromosome is made before the cell divides and one of each chromosome goes to each new cell.
A cell that has two copies of each chromosome is called a diploid cell. This means that each chromosome in the cell has a matching homologous chromosome. Humans have diploid cells in their body, with a total of 46 chromosomes arranged in 23 pairs.
At metaphase of mitosis, chromosomes are duplicated, so each chromatid will become a full chromosome. Therefore, with 92 chromatids, you will end up with 92 chromosomes after the completion of mitosis.
Each chromosome in a doubled or replicated pair is referred to as a "sister chromatid." During cell division, each chromosome replicates to form two sister chromatids that are identical copies of each other, connected at a region called the centromere. These sister chromatids separate during mitosis or meiosis to ensure that each daughter cell receives an identical set of chromosomes.
A somatic cell with two of each type of chromosome has a diploid chromosome number. This means that the cell has a complete set of chromosomes, one from each parent.
If you mean haploid, as in half of each chromosome, or containing only one chromatid from each full chromosome, thenthe cell is called haploid.
A cell with two copies of each chromosome is called a diploid cell. A cell with one copy is called a haploid cell.
If you mean haploid, as in half of each chromosome, or containing only one chromatid from each full chromosome, thenthe cell is called haploid.
Mitosis results in two identical cells being produced from the original cell. A copy of each chromosome is made before the cell divides and one of each chromosome goes to each new cell.
Just before cell division begins,the amount of DNA doubles and so do the chromosomes.Each doubled chromosome consists of two copies of the original chromosome joined at the center
A cell that has two copies of each chromosome is called a diploid cell. This means that each chromosome in the cell has a matching homologous chromosome. Humans have diploid cells in their body, with a total of 46 chromosomes arranged in 23 pairs.
During meiosis, sex cells form when chromosome pairs are separated from each other into different cells during the first division (meiosis I) and sister chromatids are separated from each other during the second division (meiosis II). This process results in the formation of haploid cells that have half the number of chromosomes as the original parent cell.
going to divide:)or it;s a doughter cell:*
In the nucleus of each cell in the body.
At metaphase of mitosis, chromosomes are duplicated, so each chromatid will become a full chromosome. Therefore, with 92 chromatids, you will end up with 92 chromosomes after the completion of mitosis.