2 twice
Interphase occurs once before mitosis in the cell cycle. During interphase, the cell prepares for division by growing and replicating its DNA. It consists of three phases: G1 (growth), S (DNA synthesis), and G2 (preparation for mitosis). After interphase is complete, the cell enters mitosis to divide into two daughter cells.
There are 46 chromosomes after mitosis. It stays the same from the beginning.
After one cell cycle of mitosis, the number of cells doubles to 10. After a second cell cycle, each of the 10 cells will divide again, resulting in a total of 20 cells. This is because mitosis involves one round of cell division followed by another round of cell division, leading to exponential growth.
There are the same amount of chromosomes as when you started when cells divide via mitosis because you are forming 2 diploid cells i.e. 46 chromosome's. However in Meiosis you form 4 haploid cells because the process of Mitosis happens twice.
twice as many as when the cell is not undergoing mitosis
In mitosis the cell divides once. The two cells, in some cases, may then divide again, but mitosis is just one cell dividing into two cells.
Mitosis that is an Equational division in which one cell divide into two daughter cells having same chromosome number.
Once, and then the two daughter cells can grow and later divide.
one time.
Interphase occurs once before mitosis in the cell cycle. During interphase, the cell prepares for division by growing and replicating its DNA. It consists of three phases: G1 (growth), S (DNA synthesis), and G2 (preparation for mitosis). After interphase is complete, the cell enters mitosis to divide into two daughter cells.
Cells divide once in mitosis, resulting in two daughter cells that are genetically identical to the original cell. In meiosis, cells divide twice, resulting in four daughter cells that are genetically diverse due to genetic recombination.
There are 46 chromosomes after mitosis. It stays the same from the beginning.
It divides once, and becomes 2 cells.
Mitosis requires only a single parent. However, when the mitosis produce they give four daughter cells. Mitosis has two cell divisions.
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.
A eukaryotic cell cycle typically consists of four stages: G1 (Gap 1), S (Synthesis), G2 (Gap 2), and M (Mitosis). The cell alternates between these stages to grow and divide.
After one cell cycle of mitosis, the number of cells doubles to 10. After a second cell cycle, each of the 10 cells will divide again, resulting in a total of 20 cells. This is because mitosis involves one round of cell division followed by another round of cell division, leading to exponential growth.