Yes, it is possible for a woman to have twins from two different fathers. This rare phenomenon is known as heteropaternal superfecundation. It occurs when a woman releases multiple eggs during ovulation and has sexual intercourse with different partners within a short timeframe. Each egg can be fertilized by sperm from a different man, resulting in twins with different biological fathers.
Yes, it is possible for twins to have different fathers. This rare occurrence is known as heteropaternal superfecundation, where a woman releases multiple eggs during ovulation and has sexual intercourse with different partners within a short timeframe.
Yes, it is possible for a mother to have fraternal twins with different fathers, a phenomenon known as heteropaternal superfecundation. This occurs when a woman releases multiple eggs during ovulation and has sexual intercourse with different partners within a short timeframe.
There are at least three ways to produce twins. One is when the female produces two eggs, both of which are fertilized by the male. This is how fraternal twins are produced. Fraternal twins can be both the same sex or different sexes. Fraternal twins may only bear a slight resemblance to one another, no more than any two siblings might. (Fraternal twins can actually have different biological fathers, because the eggs may be produced a day or two apart.) Another is for the woman to produce one egg which is fertilized by the male, and then the egg divides into two. This is the traditional way that so-called identical twins are produced. Identical twins are always the same sex. (I use the term 'so-called,' because they are actually 'mirror image' twins.) A third way is for the woman to produce one egg, which then divides into two, which are both subsequently fertilized. There is a greater chance that such twins will resemble one another than fraternal twins, and they may be the same or opposite sexes.
no. he/she cannot coz' a human being has 46 chromosomes 23 of which comes from the mum, 23 comes from the father. a sperm is strictly composed of 23 chromosomes, haploid of the 46. other reason is, fertilization suggests that only 1 sperm can penetrate a single egg, that's anti polyspermy. so f 1 man had sex with a woman then it's sperm will penetrate the ovulated egg, and the next man's sperm will never have the chance to penetrate the egg so is true with the other sperms of the first man.
By definition two children born to the same mother at the same time would be twins. It would be possible that they would not be twins if they were only half brothers, meaning that they shared a father but were born to two different mothers at the same time, or where they shared the same mother and father, but one was carried and born to a surrogate, or both by two separate surrogates and just happened to look very simmilar, though they would share different DNA. If they did share the exact same DNA and also were not twins one would have to be the 'clone' or the other, meaning that a single embryo was 'conceived' from one sperm and one egg, which was cloned, and each embryo was implanted into a different woman's womb, and were born at the exact same time. They could just be dogs or another animal that is born in a liter. They're brothers and look exactly the same, but aren't neccesarily twins.
Yes, it is possible for twins to have different fathers. This rare occurrence is known as heteropaternal superfecundation, where a woman releases multiple eggs during ovulation and has sexual intercourse with different partners within a short timeframe.
Yes, it is possible for a mother to have fraternal twins with different fathers, a phenomenon known as heteropaternal superfecundation. This occurs when a woman releases multiple eggs during ovulation and has sexual intercourse with different partners within a short timeframe.
Yes. It is possible for twins to have different fathers in a phenomenon called heteropaternal superfecundation, which occurs when two of a woman's eggs are fertilized by sperm from two different men.
Yes. If a woman has been sexually active with more than one person in a short period of time, there is a less than a one percent chance that a mother will have fraternal twins by two different fathers.
A Croatian woman who slept with two men at the same time has given birth to twins with two different fathers. The 23-year-old student, who has been named only as M B, gave birth to non-identical twins in Zagreb seven months ago. However, she has revealed that DNA testing has shown the children have different fathers.She told daily Jutarnji List, "I was shocked at getting pregnant and even more surprised when doctors told me that my two sons had different fathers." Doctors have said twins being born to different fathers is extremely rare.
Yes, it is possible for a woman to have twins from two different fathers in a rare phenomenon called heteropaternal superfecundation. This can occur when a woman releases multiple eggs during ovulation and has sexual intercourse with different partners during the same ovulation period.
Not at the same time to create a single baby. But it is possible that if the woman has two eggs then two different men can fertilize them, resulting in fraternal twins that are half-brothers.
It is possible for two siblings to have different biological fathers, a situation known as heteropaternal superfecundation. This can occur when a woman ovulates multiple eggs and has intercourse with different partners within a short timeframe. In this case, while rare, it is possible for both sisters to have the same mother but different fathers. Confirmation through DNA testing can provide definitive answers.
Yes, but not monozygotic twins. There are cases where a woman was impregnated by two (or more?) men very close in time to each other, and two ova were fertilized by different men. In that case black and white twins are quite possible.
Yes, but only in cases in which they're fraternal, as identical twins form from a single egg/sperm combination and thus cannot have different fathers. In rare instances, when two or more of a woman's eggs are fertilized by different men within the same ovulation period it's called heteropaternal superfecundation.
All of your children will have different fathers and they will only be half sisters its really not right to have babies with a bunch of different guys.
Yes, this phenomenon is known as heteropaternal superfecundation. It occurs when a woman has sexual intercourse with two different men within a short timeframe, resulting in fraternal twins with different biological fathers. This rare occurrence can only be confirmed through DNA testing.