In mitosis, the daughter cells each have the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
If a parent call has 28 chromosomes the daughter cell would have 46 chromosomes because it under went mitosis.
34. Mitosis replicates the cell's chromosomes, then divides them in two with the rest of the cell. Mitosis does not change chromosome number. (34*2)/2=34
Mitotic cell division results in two daughter cells that have the identical numbers and kinds of chromosomes as the parent cell.
14 chromosomes each
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.
Each daughter cell contains half of the chromosomes from the parent cell. Because the parent cell undergoes DNA replication before mitosis, the parent cell and the daughter cells will be diploid.
two diploid daughter cells
A diploid cell. In other words, a cell containing 2n chromosomes.
46.In humans, the only cells that divide by mitosis are ones with two sets of chromosomes, called diploid cells. They have 46 chromosomes, and the daughter-cells have 46 as well, because mitosis preserves the chromosome number.
56 chromosomes
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.
Diploid
Each daughter cell contains half of the chromosomes from the parent cell. Because the parent cell undergoes DNA replication before mitosis, the parent cell and the daughter cells will be diploid.
Two diploid daughter cells with 46 chromosomes each. In Meiosis, there would be 4 haploid cells with 23 chromosomes each. Edited answer; A zygote undergoes mitosis to form an young embryo, which ultimately develops in to a new plant
23 chromosomes
two diploid daughter cells
24 since a haploid is half of the diploid containing 48 chromosomes
A diploid cell. In other words, a cell containing 2n chromosomes.
46.In humans, the only cells that divide by mitosis are ones with two sets of chromosomes, called diploid cells. They have 46 chromosomes, and the daughter-cells have 46 as well, because mitosis preserves the chromosome number.
A gamete has half the diploid number of chromosomes, so in this case, the gamete would have 15 chromosomes.
In animal cells (meiosis) the parent (which is a diploid cell with homologous pairs of chromosomes) seperates into two daughter cells containing the replicated pairs of sister chromatids. The process of meiosis is begun again (meiosis II) from which the sister chromatids separate into individual chromosomes. Then, the two diploid cells separate into 4 haploid daughter cells containing 1 chromosome. This is a generalized answer without the steps of meiosis described.