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Question
if you look under a microscope and see distinct chromosomes in a cell, is the cell in interphase? why or why not?
During interphase, the cell's genetic material exists as loose, thread-like chromatin, which is not visible as distinct chromosomes under a microscope. Distinct, condensed chromosomes only become visible when the cell enters mitosis or meiosis (the division phases of the cell cycle), as chromatin condenses into tightly coiled chromosomes to facilitate proper separation during cell division.
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No, the cell is not in interphase. In interphase, genetic material is in the form of uncondensed chromatin, not distinct, visible chromosomes; condensed chromosomes only appear during cell division (mitosis/meiosis).