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During cell division, the chromosome number remains constant. In mitosis, each daughter cell receives an identical set of chromosomes to the parent cell. In meiosis, the chromosome number is halved to produce gametes with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
In mitosis, the chromosome number remains constant - each daughter cell receives the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. However, in meiosis, the chromosome number is halved - the resulting gametes have half the number of chromosomes compared to the original parent cell.
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.
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.
Daughter cells in mitosis are exact copies of the parent cell; therefore, they have the same number of chromosomes.
The chromosome number for daughter cells resulting from mitosis is the same as the parent cell.
During cell division, the chromosome number remains constant. In mitosis, each daughter cell receives an identical set of chromosomes to the parent cell. In meiosis, the chromosome number is halved to produce gametes with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
They are identical with same number of chromosome to the parent cell
During mitosis, the chromosome number remains the same. The cell duplicates its chromosomes before dividing, so each daughter cell receives the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
That would be "Mitosis". In Mitosis, the daughter cells are identical to the parent cell, chromosome number and all.
In mitosis, the chromosome number remains constant - each daughter cell receives the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. However, in meiosis, the chromosome number is halved - the resulting gametes have half the number of chromosomes compared to the original parent cell.
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.
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.
The chromosome number is halved during cell division in meiosis, not mitosis.
Daughter cells in mitosis are exact copies of the parent cell; therefore, they have the same number of chromosomes.
Mitosis, of course.
Each daughter cell resulting from mitosis will have a complete set of the parent cell's genome, including one copy of each chromosome. This means that each daughter cell will have the same number of genomes as the parent cell.