Im mitosis the same number as the parent. In meiosis half the number of the parent cell.
It depends on how many chromosomes you have before the cell goes through mitosis. For example if you have 12 chromosomes after the cell goes through mitosis and breaks into two cells you will end up with 12 chromosomes in each cell and it will continue the same way on and on.
In humans, each daughter cell produced by mitotic cell division will have 46 chromosomes.
Each daughter cell typically has the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. In humans, for example, somatic cells have 46 chromosomes, so each daughter cell produced through mitosis will also have 46 chromosomes. In contrast, during meiosis, which produces gametes, daughter cells end up with half the number of chromosomes, resulting in 23 chromosomes in each gamete.
The daughter cells of meiosis I contain the haploid number of chromosomes, which is half the number of chromosomes found in the parent cell. In humans, each daughter cell of meiosis I contains 23 chromosomes.
Mitosis is the normal process of Cell division, so each daughter cell is (hopefully) a clone of the original. With a few exceptions such as sex and red blood cells, all human cells in a normal human being have 2 sets of 23 chromosomes. Therefore, the answer to this question is 46 chromosomes.
If each daughter cell has 46 chromosomes, then the total number of chromosomes in 144 daughter cells would be 144 cells × 46 chromosomes per cell = 6,624 chromosomes.
There are exactly 6 , because the daughter cells always half of how many the parent cells have .
It depends on how many chromosomes you have before the cell goes through mitosis. For example if you have 12 chromosomes after the cell goes through mitosis and breaks into two cells you will end up with 12 chromosomes in each cell and it will continue the same way on and on.
Each daughter cell produced by mitosis will have the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. Therefore, each daughter cell will also have 60 chromosomes.
In humans, each daughter cell produced by mitotic cell division will have 46 chromosomes.
Each daughter cell typically has the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. In humans, for example, somatic cells have 46 chromosomes, so each daughter cell produced through mitosis will also have 46 chromosomes. In contrast, during meiosis, which produces gametes, daughter cells end up with half the number of chromosomes, resulting in 23 chromosomes in each gamete.
There are 46 chromosomes or 23 pairs of chromosomes in each daughter cell after mitosis. Each daughter cells need 46 or 23 pairs of chromosomes to work properly and survive.
The daughter cells of meiosis I contain the haploid number of chromosomes, which is half the number of chromosomes found in the parent cell. In humans, each daughter cell of meiosis I contains 23 chromosomes.
Half the number of its original cell
there would be two daughter cells each containing 16 chromosomes
Each daughter cell will have 52 chromosomes. This is because mitosis produces daughter cells which are genetically identical to the parent cell. Therefore they will have the same number of chromosomes.
The four daughter cells of meiosis II are haploid, so they will have half the number of chromosomes as the diploid parent cell. In humans, there are 46 chromosomes in the diploid body cells, and 23 chromosomes in the haploid daughter cells of meiosis II. In females, one of the four daughter cells will contain the most cytoplasm and organelles, and will form an egg cell. In males, all four daughter cells will form sperm cells.