Let one number be 2.75x and the other x:-
2.75x*x = 5568.75
2.75x2 = 5568.75
Divide both sides by 2.75 and then square root both sides
x = 45
So the numbers are 45 and 2.75*45 = 123.75
Check: 123.75*45 = 5568.75
70
The Fundamental theorem of arithmetic.
To make the product equal to 3.2, multiply by one. To make the product greater or lesser than 3.2 multiply by a number greater or lesser than one, respectively.
Term- a number, a variable, or a product of numbers and variables.
A number as a product of prime numbers would be "x".
Not always.
No. If one of the numbers is 0 it is less; if one of the numbers is 1 it is the same as one of them; otherwise the product is greater than either
Products will be greater unless your number set includes a number less than 1.
if divide the prime numbers by the compositenumber it will give you a greater number that is either a prime number or composite.
Given any number, there is an even number that exists greater than it. That even number is a product: of 2 and some number. Therefore, the number that you started with is less than the product of a pair of numbers.
Yes, yes it is. Because a mixed number must have a whole number in it. Therefore, being multiplied only makes it bigger.
A positive number is any number greater than zero. 1 is a positive number, so is 2, 2.5, 3.14159, 11, 11.25 etc 0.5 is a positive number. The product of two positive numbers is the result of multiplying them together. * 2 x 3 = 6 (the product). In this case the product is greater than either number. But... * 0.5 x 0.25 is 0.125. ~In this case the product is actually smaller than either of the two numbers! * Or 0.5 x 10 = 5 . Here the product is greater than 0.5 but smaller than 10. So the answer is ...sometimes!
the number on the right is the greater of two numbers
"Either" is used for two. I'll assume that you mean "larger than ANY of them". The following applies to ANY real numbers.For TWO numbers, the product is larger than either of them if both numbers are greater than one. For THREE numbers, the product is larger than any of them if the two numbers OTHER than the largest number have a product greater than one. For example: 0.5, 3, 5 The largest number here is 5; the product of the OTHER two is 0.5 x 3 = 1.5. Or here is an example with integers: -5, -3, 10 The product of the "other two" numbers is 15, which is larger than one - so the product of all three is larger than the largest number (and therefore, larger than ANY of them). Another example: -5, 1, 10 The product of the two numbers OTHER than the largest is -5 x 1 = -5; since this is NOT greater than 1, the product of all three is NOT greater than any of the numbers. This reasoning can be extended to four or more numbers. For 4 numbers: If the product of all three numbers OTHER than the largest one is GREATER than one, then the product of ALL FOUR numbers is greater than ANY of them.
Not enough information.
11 x 13 = 143
No. A mixed number must be greater than 1, and two numbers that are greater than one that are multiplied together end up being greater that either number by itself.