Answer:
e. 2n = 20, 1n = 10, 1n = 10
Explanation:
When a cell undergoes mitosis it divides into two daughter cells, each identical to the original. For that reason, a diploid cell with 20 chromosmoes (2n = 20) will produce two identical daughter cells after mitosis.
During meiosis I the homologous chromosomes separate and the daughter cells become haploid (only one set of each chromosome) and with half the original chromosome number (n=10). Each chromosome has 2 chromatids.
During meiosis II the two chromatids of each chromosome separate, but the daughter cells remain haploid and with the same chromosome number.