I don't have the faintest clue; I haven't touched blueprint of life in a very long time lol. The only reason I can think of why not all chromosomes may cross over is because you get more genetic diversity that way. And since meiosis is all about variation, it seems plausible. But that's assuming not all chromosomes cross over.
JOKES
I lied.
I didn't read the question properly (yet again); soz haha
Basically the question has shown you when prophase - metaphase 1 occurs (line up at equator). It's asking you what the resulting 4 daughter cells would look like, provided diagram 1/ circle 1 is the parent cell. So you know that in meiosis, 1 parent cell = 4 daughter cells. Therefore prophase, metaphase, telephase all occur twice in meiosis.
The second diagram shows a cell about to undergo anaphase/ being pulled apart by the spindles to opposite poles of the cell where telephase can occur and you get two cells. Essentially the left side of the second cell = one new cell, and the right side of the second cell = another new cell. Therefore you can't have AA and Bb crossing over with aa Bb for example (since they aren't going to be in the same cell)
Taking the left side of the second diagram for example, since AA Bb and EE, DD are all alleles that are going to be in one cell. Since you know in meiosis, a second propase, metaphase and telephase occurs, during the second crossing over process, AA will switch with EE and Bb will switch with DD, so you end up with AE, AE, BD and bD. Which comes down to 3 combinations since AE is a repeat.
Then do the same with the right side of the second diagram and you get your answer