Sperm cells do not time travel to the ovary. They travel through the female reproductive tract via the cervix, uterus, and fallopian tubes to reach the egg for fertilization. Time travel is a concept found in Science Fiction and is not possible in reality.
The discovery of the sex cell, or sperm cell, is credited to the Dutch scientist Antonie van Leeuwenhoek in the late 17th century. He used a simple microscope to observe sperm cells for the first time in 1677.
Why do you care lol
They occur during cell division and at the time when the sperm fertilizes the egg.
Multiple sperm cells are involved in the process of fertilization, but only one sperm cell is needed to penetrate and fertilize the egg cell. Once the sperm cell penetrates the egg, it releases enzymes that break down the egg cell wall, allowing the genetic material of the sperm to enter the egg.
After fertilization of the egg cell by a sperm cell, the zygote begins to divide and form a blastocyst. The blastocyst implants in the uterus and develops into an embryo. Over time, this embryo further develops into a fetus through processes like cell division and differentiation, eventually growing into a fully formed baby.
once a month one egg cell matures in ovary of a woman each time an egg cell is maturing the lining of the uterus is thickening with blood vessels getting ready for the arrival of the sperm cell and when the egg cell is not fertilized the egg will die and it will come out as menstruation.
well cell forms zygote when an egg and sperm joins and with the passage of time it got a mature baby
the sperm goes to it when having(after) sex(it takes time for the sperm to actually enter the egg.)
Before we discuss where a mature egg is released to, perhaps you should state which species you are discussing, since lots of species have eggs, and they do not all get released in the same way.
A male would have to deposit his sperm within the female's reproductive tract during the same time that the female releases a fertile egg from her ovary.
The discovery of the sex cell, or sperm cell, is credited to the Dutch scientist Antonie van Leeuwenhoek in the late 17th century. He used a simple microscope to observe sperm cells for the first time in 1677.
Why do you care lol
They occur during cell division and at the time when the sperm fertilizes the egg.
Fertilisation takes place externally. The female produces frog spawn and the male fertilises the frog spawn outside the female's body.
No. At the time of conception (when sperm joins with egg) a human zygote is a single cell, but at the time of birth a human is a complex multicellular organism.
Multiple sperm cells are involved in the process of fertilization, but only one sperm cell is needed to penetrate and fertilize the egg cell. Once the sperm cell penetrates the egg, it releases enzymes that break down the egg cell wall, allowing the genetic material of the sperm to enter the egg.
After the wheel before time travel.