Double fertilization
Double  fertilization was  discovered by 
Nawaschin. It is the process in which two sperm nuclei from each pollen tube fertilize two cells in a female gametophyte  that is inside an ovule. After the pollen tube  enters the gametophyte, the pollen tube nucleus disintegrates and the two sperm  cells are released; one of the two sperm cells fertilizes the egg cell forming  a diploid (2n) zygote.  This is the point when fertilization actually occurs; pollination and fertilization  are two separate processes. The other sperm cell fuses with two haploid polar  nuclei (contained in the central cell) in the centre of the gametophyte. The  resulting cell is triploid (3n). This triploid cell divides through mitosis and forms the endosperm,  a nutrient-rich tissue, inside the seed.
             The two central cell maternal nuclei (polar  nuclei) that contribute to the endosperm arise by mitosis from the single  meiotic product that also gave rise to the egg. Therefore, maternal  contribution to the genetic constitution of the triploid endosperm is double  that of the embryo.