12 cells
Each daughter cell will have 32 chromosomes. Mitosis ensures that the genetic material is equally distributed between the two daughter cells, resulting in each cell maintaining the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
A nucleus with 46 chromosomes that undergoes mitosis will produce two daughter cells. The identical daughter cells will have 46 chromosomes each just like the parent cell.
It will have 4 daughter cells and 10 chromosome per daughter cell because the number of chromosomes you start with is doubled and then divided by four.
mitosis produces 2 daughter cells where as meiosis produces 4. this applies to all cells except for cancer cells that malfunction in mitosis
Well, darling, let me break it down for you. In meiosis, a cell with 2n chromosomes will produce cells with n chromosomes, so each resulting cell will have 39 chromosomes. In mitosis, the number of chromosomes remains the same, so each resulting cell will also have 78 chromosomes. Hope that clears things up for you, sugar.
46.In humans, the only cells that divide by mitosis are ones with two sets of chromosomes, called diploid cells. They have 46 chromosomes, and the daughter-cells have 46 as well, because mitosis preserves the chromosome number.
A daughter cell resulting from mitosis will have the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. This means that the daughter cell will typically have a total of 46 chromosomes in humans, as long as there is no abnormality or mutation during the process of cell division.
In mitosis, the daughter cells each have the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
Chromosomes become half during anaphase of mitosis. Sister chromatids are separated and pulled to opposite poles of the cell, resulting in each daughter cell receiving a complete set of chromosomes.
In metaphase of meiosis, homologous chromosomes line up in pairs, while in metaphase of mitosis, individual chromosomes line up singly. Additionally, in meiosis, there are two rounds of division resulting in four daughter cells with half the number of chromosomes, while in mitosis, there is one round of division resulting in two daughter cells with the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
In mitosis, chromosomes are duplicated and then segregated into two identical daughter cells, resulting in cells with the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. In meiosis, chromosomes are duplicated but then segregated twice, resulting in four daughter cells with half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
The daughter cells formed by meiosis are haploid, meaning they have only one set of chromosomes. In humans, the haploid number of chromosomes is 23.