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You can see a chromosone at all times, however they are most easily visible during mitosis, when the cell is dividing. During this process the chromosomes condense, making them more easily visible.
No. Mitosis , process of nuclear division in a living cell by which the carriers of hereditary information, or the chromosomes, are exactly replicated and the two copies distributed to identical daughter nuclei.In Meiosis, the cells that are formed have 1/2 the number of chromosomes and the cells are called gametes. They are not identical to the original cell.
Once, and then the two daughter cells can grow and later divide.
Mitosis is the process of separating chromosomes in its cell nucleus into two identical sets in two nuclei within eukaryotic cells. As for when it takes place, I believe it starts after the G2(second gap) stage of Interphase ends.
To be more accurate the nucleus doesn't split in mitosis because after DNA replicates in interphase and prophase starts nuclear membrane is removed and there is no longer a nucleus just free chromosomes. These separate in anaphase and then in telophase where two daughter cells are going to be produced the nuclear membrane reforms as well as the nucleolus forming two cells with identical nuclei.
it has four times the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
The cell division process that only occurs in specific cells and at specific times is called mitosis. Mitosis is a type of cell division that results in two daughter cells with the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. It is essential for growth, repair, and maintenance of multicellular organisms.
You can see a chromosone at all times, however they are most easily visible during mitosis, when the cell is dividing. During this process the chromosomes condense, making them more easily visible.
During cell division, chromatin material gets organized into tightly packed structures called chromosomes. Chromosomes contain DNA that carries the genetic information of the cell, crucial for proper cell division and inheritance of genetic traits.
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They replicate before meiosis begins, as it is the division phase. The chromosomes duplicate during interphase which is right before the beginning of meiosis. After going through meiosis I the chromosomes DO NOT duplicate nor do they cross over they simply continue on. Hope this helps. :)
No. Mitosis , process of nuclear division in a living cell by which the carriers of hereditary information, or the chromosomes, are exactly replicated and the two copies distributed to identical daughter nuclei.In Meiosis, the cells that are formed have 1/2 the number of chromosomes and the cells are called gametes. They are not identical to the original cell.
Once, and then the two daughter cells can grow and later divide.
Two successive nuclear divisions occur, Meiosis I (Reduction) and Meiosis II (Division)
Mitosis is the process of separating chromosomes in its cell nucleus into two identical sets in two nuclei within eukaryotic cells. As for when it takes place, I believe it starts after the G2(second gap) stage of Interphase ends.
Mitosis involves one cell division and ends up with two daughter cells. Meiosis involves two cell divisions and ends up with four daughter cells.
During meiosis, the cell undergoes two divisions resulting in four daughter cells each with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell. This reduction is necessary for sexual reproduction to ensure the correct number of chromosomes is maintained when two gametes, each with half the chromosome number, combine during fertilization to form a diploid zygote. In contrast, mitosis is a single division process that results in two daughter cells with the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell, allowing for growth and repair in multicellular organisms.