Two Daughter Cells
They have unchanged chromosomal number. They are identical nucleii
The phase in the cell cycle when the cell is not going through mitosis is called interphase.
difference between cell cycle and mitosis
Mitosis occurs first in the cell cycle before meiosis.
No, interphase is not part of mitosis. Interphase is the phase in the cell cycle where the cell grows, replicates its DNA, and prepares for cell division. Mitosis is a separate phase of the cell cycle where the cell's nucleus divides into two daughter nuclei.
The finished product of mitosis is two daughter cells, each with the same number of chromosomes as the original parent cell. These daughter cells are genetically identical to each other and to the parent cell.
No, but mitosis is a part [the M-phase] of the Cell cycle.
The phase in the cell cycle when the cell is not going through mitosis is called interphase.
Normal cell activities occur not in mitosis, but in a cell cycle in a general. This part of cell cycle is called interphase. Mitosis starts when the cell starts dividing, not when a cell is carrying out normal function.
difference between cell cycle and mitosis
Mitosis occurs first in the cell cycle before meiosis.
Mitosis is part of the cell cycle, specifically the stage where a cell divides its genetic material and forms two identical daughter cells.
mitosis
Mitosis
Mitosis
No, interphase is not part of mitosis. Interphase is the phase in the cell cycle where the cell grows, replicates its DNA, and prepares for cell division. Mitosis is a separate phase of the cell cycle where the cell's nucleus divides into two daughter nuclei.
The two stages of the cell cycle that is not a part of mitosis is interphase and death.
Actually a combination of mitosis and meiosis take up most of the cell cycle.