Both daughter cells will also have 10 chromosomes.
After meiosis in a eukaryotic cell with 20 chromosomes, four haploid cells are produced, each with 10 chromosomes. This process involves two rounds of cell division, resulting in the formation of gametes with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
The G2 phase of the cell cycle typically represents 5-10% of the total duration. It is a stage where the cell prepares for cell division by synthesizing proteins and organelles. During this phase, the cell undergoes necessary checks and repairs before moving on to mitosis.
Two.Mitosis involves a single cell dividing into two genetically identical daughter cells.
Meiosis results in cells with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell. Therefore, if a parent cell has 20 chromosomes, the result of meiosis will be cells with 10 chromosomes.
If you are talking about mitosis, then for a typical eukaryotic cell, after mitosis, each daughter cell will contain the same amount of chromosomes as the parent cell (ie. 2n --> two 2n cells.) If you are talking about meiosis, then each will contain half the chromosomes as the parent cell (ie. 2n --> four n cells)
It will have 4 daughter cells and 10 chromosome per daughter cell because the number of chromosomes you start with is doubled and then divided by four.
One Cell has 10 chromosomes, it divides into 5 chromosomes. So at the end it has, 5 chromosomes. Your Welcome for the answer! ^_^
2=20
After meiosis in a eukaryotic cell with 20 chromosomes, four haploid cells are produced, each with 10 chromosomes. This process involves two rounds of cell division, resulting in the formation of gametes with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
There are 26 chromosomes in the somatic cells of the Leopard Frog.
The G2 phase of the cell cycle typically represents 5-10% of the total duration. It is a stage where the cell prepares for cell division by synthesizing proteins and organelles. During this phase, the cell undergoes necessary checks and repairs before moving on to mitosis.
Each resulting daughter cell should also contain 20 chromosomes. During the cell division process known as mitosis, the cell's chromosomes are duplicated and then divided equally between the two daughter cells.
Interphase is different from the division stages of meiosis and mitosis in that no division occurs at interphase. Activities that occur include increase in the size of the cell and DNA synthesis.
Two.Mitosis involves a single cell dividing into two genetically identical daughter cells.
Meiosis results in cells with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell. Therefore, if a parent cell has 20 chromosomes, the result of meiosis will be cells with 10 chromosomes.
If you are talking about mitosis, then for a typical eukaryotic cell, after mitosis, each daughter cell will contain the same amount of chromosomes as the parent cell (ie. 2n --> two 2n cells.) If you are talking about meiosis, then each will contain half the chromosomes as the parent cell (ie. 2n --> four n cells)
Without access to Figure 10-1, I can't provide a specific answer regarding which step of mitosis is illustrated in Diagram A. However, mitosis consists of several phases: prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase. Each phase has distinct characteristics, such as chromatin condensing into chromosomes in prophase or chromosomes aligning at the cell's equatorial plate in metaphase. If you describe the diagram, I can help identify the phase.