Paternity testing/DNA??

Here's the scenario: 40 year old woman finds out that her Dad may not in reality be her biological Dad. He has unfortanetly, passed on. How can she find out? She does enjoy siblings. In other words, how does she go in the order of taking a paternity test her Dad is already gone? Thanks.

Answers:
Isn't DNA carrying out tests expensive, I don't now. What I am axiom here, is, does it really make that much difference. Did you love your dad regardless if he be your real father or not. What if you did find out he be not, and found your real dad, and he be an arrogant bum. This is the chance you pilfer. Doesn't you Mom know? Do you look like your siblings? I regard surely your Mother knows. Good luck. Are you the oldest? If you hold to know, just do what the rest here are dictum, all angelic ideas. I right to be heard, just give up your job it alone, and forget it. You might not like what you find. . .and it is too in arrears, really.
by there blood type
If her mother is alive and she can be sure that her siblings are the children of the putative father consequently it is relatively simple to do a genetic comparison between them to determine if they share a common father.

Of course she wants the co-operationof her siblings and her mother. And these sorts of tests aren't as defintive as a direct paternity examination, particularly if the alternative father is close relative of the putative father. But she could achieve a result with a probability of 90% or better from themother and one sibling, and increasingly bigger probailities next to more siblings.

EDIT

>>>What would the Mother have to do next to it? We're talking
>>> in the region of the father here.

Everyone receives partially of their genome from each parent. In this luggage one parent is not present so the easiest approach to determine with any certitude what the paternal genome is is to subtract the mother. However to do that you entail to know what the mother's genetics are.

Basically you are removing adjectives the bits that you can determine you didn't inherit from your mother, and whatever is disappeared must be form your father. If those remaining bits match your siblings next you share the same father. But you obligation to know which bits to subtract.

There are other ways to do this if your mother own;t agree, but to give reliable results you necessitate to have like mad of the putative father's relatives to sample from. Without your mother's input you obligation to compare the sequences to multiple relatives and see whether you can find a match. If here is any possibility that the biological father is a blood relative of the putative father it becomes much more complicated if the caring material can't be eliminate.
if her "dad" has any surviving relatives such as brothers or sisters, other children or anyone of 1st scope relation, then she can gain a genetic test done near one of his family member and compare it to hers.

in extreme cases, or if she have lots of money, she could even get his body unearth and they can take sample from his body. but they only do that if you are loaded and can retribution big bucks or if it is related to a major crime.
Interesting put somebody through the mill.

The answer about finding a close relative (ie brother or sister) of the dad would be a perfect place to start.

Comparing all three siblings'(you and your two sibs) DNA would give an account you whether or not you were adjectives fathered by the same man. Being justifiably sure of their paternity would indirectly confirm your own.
The most sensible advice have been given by 'shardf'.

Take it
If this man who died, raise her, and took care of her next he was her indisputable father.
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