46 chromosomes
Technically there will be no sister chromatids remaining at the beginning of telophase, as they will have been pulled apart during anaphase into two separate daughter chromosomes. From prophase to anaphase, however, the cell undergoing mitosis would have had 14 sister chromatids. After anaphase there would be a total of 28 daughter chromosomes in the cell, and they would be organized into two groups of 14 that corresponded to the 14 chromosomes the cell started with (barring any mistakes in the process).
There are a total of 46 replicated chromosomes (plus 46 original), since metaphase precedes the actual division in anaphase, and each daughter cell receives 46 chromosomes in mitosis.
At the beginning of meiosis, a cell with 46 chromosomes would undergo DNA replication to end up with 92 chromatids. During anaphase 2 of meiosis, these chromatids would separate, resulting in daughter cells with 46 chromosomes each, the same as the original cell before replication.
There are a total of four sister chromatids present during anaphase of mitosis. Each replicated chromosome consists of two sister chromatids that are held together by a centromere. During anaphase, these sister chromatids separate and are pulled to opposite poles of the cell by the spindle fibers.
In anaphase of meiosis, the chromosomes are separated into two sets. If the original cell had 14 chromosomes (7 pairs), during meiosis I, the homologous chromosomes are separated, resulting in two cells, each with 7 chromosomes. During meiosis II, which is similar to mitosis, the sister chromatids are separated, leading to a total of four daughter cells, each with 7 chromosomes. Therefore, in anaphase II, each cell will still have 7 chromosomes.
Technically there will be no sister chromatids remaining at the beginning of telophase, as they will have been pulled apart during anaphase into two separate daughter chromosomes. From prophase to anaphase, however, the cell undergoing mitosis would have had 14 sister chromatids. After anaphase there would be a total of 28 daughter chromosomes in the cell, and they would be organized into two groups of 14 that corresponded to the 14 chromosomes the cell started with (barring any mistakes in the process).
There are a total of 46 replicated chromosomes (plus 46 original), since metaphase precedes the actual division in anaphase, and each daughter cell receives 46 chromosomes in mitosis.
At the beginning of meiosis, a cell with 46 chromosomes would undergo DNA replication to end up with 92 chromatids. During anaphase 2 of meiosis, these chromatids would separate, resulting in daughter cells with 46 chromosomes each, the same as the original cell before replication.
These answers are, well, misguided. The number of chromosomes visible at the beginning of mitosis is whatever the full complement of chromosomes is for that organism. In humans, it would be 46. As mitosis proceeds, these are replicated to 92, but at the very beginning of mitosis you would still have the diploid number.
There are a total of four sister chromatids present during anaphase of mitosis. Each replicated chromosome consists of two sister chromatids that are held together by a centromere. During anaphase, these sister chromatids separate and are pulled to opposite poles of the cell by the spindle fibers.
5 total they are... interphase prophase metaphase anaphase telophase
there are 23 pairs of matching chromosomes 46 chromosomes altogether.
In anaphase of meiosis, the chromosomes are separated into two sets. If the original cell had 14 chromosomes (7 pairs), during meiosis I, the homologous chromosomes are separated, resulting in two cells, each with 7 chromosomes. During meiosis II, which is similar to mitosis, the sister chromatids are separated, leading to a total of four daughter cells, each with 7 chromosomes. Therefore, in anaphase II, each cell will still have 7 chromosomes.
Mitosis is a process consisting of four main steps: prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase. Each step involves specific events and changes in the cell, including the condensing and aligning of chromosomes, their separation into two sets, and the formation of two daughter cells. Therefore, mitosis requires a total of four cell division steps.
This depends both on the cell undergoing mitosis and the stage in mitosis which is currently underway. Humans have 46 chromosomes per cell, but in some stages of mitosis have 92. Dogs have 78 chromosomes, but at some stages of mitosis have 156.
In humans, during interphase, before DNA replication, there are 46 chromosomes. After DNA replication, there are 92 chromosomes (4 sets of 23). During prophase, metaphase, and anaphase, there are 92 chromosomes. During anaphase, the 4 sets of chromosomes separate into 2 sets of 23 and move to opposite poles. There are still 92 chromosomes in the cell. During telophase each of the 2 sets of 23 chromosomes separate to opposite poles and a new nuclear membrane forms around each of the 2 sets, forming two new identical nuclei, each with 2 sets of 23 chromosomes. Once the cell divides in the process of cytokinesis, there will be two new identical daughter nuclei in two new daughter cells, each containing 2 sets of 23 chromosomes for a total of 46, and each of the two daughter cells will enter into interphase.
A typical human cell contains 46 chromosomes at anaphase, which is the stage of cell division when the chromosomes separate and move to opposite ends of the cell. This is because each chromosome in the cell is composed of two identical sister chromatids, resulting in a total of 46 individual chromosomes.