In case this is one of those trick questions, (i.e. onecell divides 100 times), the answer is obviously 101.
Otherwise, the answer is not nearly as simple. 100 generations would in principle give you roughly 1030 cells.
However, a "typical" cell has something between 100 and 1000 femtoliters of volume, of which 90% is water. Consequently, 1030 cells would need something like 1016 to 1017 liters of water, which is about the equivalent of Lake Michigan. A cell body of that size is rather unlikely to be encountered. Nutrition and oxygenation of such a living mass is by no means trivial (or even realistic).
it really depends on what kind of cell but if it is it will be 6x1000 and that will your answer because i read that cell divide at least 1000 times
A cell undergoing meiotic division will divide twice, yielding 4 haploid cells.
No, each egg cell is a single haploid cell. Once it is fertilised it divides into many different cells, which later on forms the foetus.
2,4,6...
Meiosis divides twice since it is trying to duplicate the cells to create two new daughter cells for the creation process in species. It is the opposite of mitosis.
Just once, after it divides into a million cells it will get bigger.
It divides once, and becomes 2 cells.
it really depends on what kind of cell but if it is it will be 6x1000 and that will your answer because i read that cell divide at least 1000 times
Once, and then the two daughter cells can grow and later divide.
When a cell divides into half, then two cells have emerged. The two cells can continue with the chain of dividing themselves into more halves. Each cell divides into two cells making a total of four cells. The number of cells that can cell can have when it divides, depends on how many times it has divided itself.
A cell undergoing meiotic division will divide twice, yielding 4 haploid cells.
O.o
Yes the firm into daughter cells Wich is into two cells
2
twice
No, each egg cell is a single haploid cell. Once it is fertilised it divides into many different cells, which later on forms the foetus.
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.