Mitosis ends with two diploid cells. During this process, a single diploid parent cell divides to produce two genetically identical daughter cells, each with the same number of chromosomes as the original cell. This ensures that the diploid chromosome number is maintained in the resulting cells.
its haploid= 4 cellsBy the end of meiosis all four resulting daughter cells are haploid.
diploid cells
At the beginning of mitosis, a cell has a diploid chromosome number, which means it contains two sets of chromosomes (one from each parent). For example, in humans, this number is 46 chromosomes. By the end of mitosis, each daughter cell also has the same diploid chromosome number, maintaining the genetic consistency across the cells. Therefore, both the parent cell and the two daughter cells each have 46 chromosomes.
In fact diploid cells are divided by meiosis. The process of meiosis is to divide a diploid cell into four haploid cells to produce gametes. In the second stage of meiosis it divides the two cell into to equal parts without duplicating the new genetic material. If you did this with a haploid cell, you would end up with a 1/4 of the original number of chromosomes. For example if a human haploid chromosome divided it would only have 11.5 chromosomes.
Two identical daughters cells are produced from a single parent cell due to mitosis. i guess he answered it for ya xD
Mitosis produces DIPLOID cells- remember in mitosis your INCREASING the number of CELLS but the chromosome number is the SAME as the parentso a parent that has a (DIPLOID number of 10)will produce at the end of mitosis will produce 2 children with a diploid number of (10)That is why Mitosis is CONSERVATIVE.So in actuality, 1 diploid cell will produce 2 diploid cells in mitosisThe above is only true if the starting cell is itself diploid. However there are plenty of instances, especially in plants, in which cells that are haploid (the ones that give rise to pollen and egg, and endosperm nuclei, for example) or multiploid (hexaploid wheat, for example) undergo mitosis, and the cells that are produced have the same ploidy as the starting cell. Always. As noted above, mitosis is conservative. However, you ought not assume that you started with a diploid cell.
At the end of mitosis the cell is called a Diploid cell. it has all the genetic information.
Mitosis is the cell cycle phase wherein the cell nucleus chromosomes are separated. After mitosis, two identical cells will be created.
They are haploid. As meosis produces sex cells (sperm and eggs) they must have half the genetic material, so when fertilisation occurs the gamete formed has one full set of chromosomes, it is diploid.
Haploid... i think but most likely At the end of Mitosis you are left with two identical diploid cells, but at the end of Meiosis there are four haploid cells.
After mitosis you have two cells and after meiosis you have 4 cells.
Mitosis produces two genetically identical daughter cells.
its haploid= 4 cellsBy the end of meiosis all four resulting daughter cells are haploid.
diploid cells
2
At the beginning of mitosis, a cell has a diploid chromosome number, which means it contains two sets of chromosomes (one from each parent). For example, in humans, this number is 46 chromosomes. By the end of mitosis, each daughter cell also has the same diploid chromosome number, maintaining the genetic consistency across the cells. Therefore, both the parent cell and the two daughter cells each have 46 chromosomes.
Two cells.