Interphase (commonly not used but still important to mitosis), prophase, prometaphase (sometimes not used, but in higher education it is used because metaphase is so long), metaphase, anaphase, telophase/cytokinesis.
The three stages of the cell cycle are interphase, mitosis, and cytokinesis. The four phases of mitosis are prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase. In mitosis, the cell's nucleus divides into two identical daughter nuclei.
The phases found in both meiosis and mitosis are prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase. In meiosis, there are two rounds of division (meiosis I and meiosis II), while mitosis only involves one round of division.
The cell cycle consists of interphase (G1, S, G2 phases) followed by mitosis (prophase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase) and cytokinesis. Interphase involves growth and DNA replication; mitosis divides the cell's nucleus into two daughter nuclei; and cytokinesis divides the cytoplasm to complete cell division.
In mitosis, the phases are prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase. In meiosis, the phases are similar but with two rounds of division: prophase I, metaphase I, anaphase I, telophase I, followed by prophase II, metaphase II, anaphase II, and telophase II.
The cell cycle has four distinct phases which are the G1 phase, S phase, G2 phase, and M phase (Mitosis). The term interphase is a collective term that is used to describe the G1, S, and G2 phases.
the four phases of mitosis are prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase
prophasemetaphaseanaphasetelophaseThis is the four phases of this own
the phases are prophase,metaphase,anaphase,telophase
ProphaseMetaphaseAnaphaseTelophase
ProphaseMetaphaseAnaphaseTelophase
First of all, its phases not faces. Prophase, Anaphase, Metaphase, and Telophase are the four phases/stages of mitosis.
4
prophase, metaphase, anaphase
propase metaphase
mitosis
Yes, they do identify three phases of mitosis. The first one is Prophase, then Anaphase and finally Metaphase.
The two main phases of a cell cycle are interphase and mitosis.