Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes; 46 chromosomes in all, 23 from the father and 23 from the mother.
A normal human being has 23 chromosomes from each parent, giving them 23 pairs or 46 in total. It is called Haploid.
No. The human cell has 23 chromosome pairs (total 46 chromosomes). Each chromosome has many genes.
23 Pairs
The number of genes varies. Most of any chromosome consists of non-coding DNA, which does not contain any genes. Each chromosome has many chromatins. One gene consists of many chromatins. Therefore, one chromosome could have many genes.
The number of genes varies from chromosome to chromosome and the number of chromosomes varies from species to species (from as few as 1 single chromosome per cell to as many 30,000 chromosome pairs per cell). Human cells have 23 chromosome pairs per cell.
46
46.
1 billion
23 chromosomes
No. The human cell has 23 chromosome pairs (total 46 chromosomes). Each chromosome has many genes.
if it is a human chromosome it will have 32 chromosomes
23
21
23 chromosomes
2
5
there are 23 chromosome pairs in a human cell
Most have 2. Some have 3 :-(