Yes, with a microscope. During mitosis, the chromatins condense to form chromosomes, which are visible under a microscope.
No, dyads are not visible in mitosis. Dyads are two sister chromatids joined at the centromere, and they separate during anaphase of mitosis to form individual chromosomes that are visible under a microscope.
In human chromosomes, each pair of chromosomes consists of two homologous chromosomes, forming a dyad during the process of cell division. Humans typically have 23 pairs of chromosomes, resulting in 23 dyads. Therefore, there are 23 dyads in human chromosomes during the metaphase stage of meiosis or mitosis.
The phase of mitosis when the dyads are separated into monads is called anaphase. During this stage, the sister chromatids (dyads) are pulled apart by the spindle fibers and move toward opposite poles of the cell. This separation ensures that each daughter cell will receive an identical set of chromosomes. Anaphase is a critical step in ensuring proper chromosome distribution during cell division.
Chromosomes are visible in the cell nucleus during mitosis and meiosis.
The initial visible phase of mitosis is prophase. During prophase, the nuclear envelope breaks down, chromosomes condense, and the mitotic spindle begins to form.
No, dyads are not visible in mitosis. Dyads are two sister chromatids joined at the centromere, and they separate during anaphase of mitosis to form individual chromosomes that are visible under a microscope.
They first become visible during prophase of mitosis.
Chromosomes are visible in the cell nucleus during mitosis and meiosis.
Chromosomes are visible during cell division, specifically during mitosis and meiosis. This is when the chromosomes condense and become more distinguishable. In interphase, the chromosomes are less condensed and not easily visible as individual structures.
DNA is visible during mitosis (replication) when the chromosomes condense.
Sister chromatids are visible during metaphase of mitosis, where they align along the metaphase plate in the center of the cell. This is when the chromosomes are most condensed and easily visible under a microscope.
During the Prophase. :)Chromosomes become highly condensed.They are visible to light microscope,not naked eye
chromatid
The stage of mitosis when the chromatids are visible is the metaphase stage. During metaphase, the duplicated chromosomes line up along the center of the cell, with their chromatids attached to the spindle fibers.
The initial visible phase of mitosis is prophase. During prophase, the nuclear envelope breaks down, chromosomes condense, and the mitotic spindle begins to form.
DNA is never visible to a naked eye but you can see chromosomes filled with DNA in mitosis during prophase.
The first clue that mitosis has begun is the condensation of genetic material into visible chromosomes. This occurs during the prophase stage of mitosis when the chromosomes become visible under a microscope.