No.
The product of the original numbers is equal to the product of the GCF and LCM. Divide the product of the LCM and GCF by the one number. The answer will be the other.
If the other number is a multiple of 5, it will be the LCM. If not, the LCM will be their product.
The LCM of a single number such as 4375 is the number itself.
The LCM of 108 and 22 is 1188. You can't get a "product" of one number.
LCM = Product/HCF = 384
The LCM of 2 and any odd number is their product.
The product of the GCF and LCM of a pair of numbers is equal to the product of the numbers.
The number are coprime so their LCM is their product ie 15*23 = 345
To find the number of decimal places in a product of decimal numbers, add up the total number of decimal places in each of the factors. For example, if you have 2.5 multiplied by 4.75, there are two decimal places in 2.5 and two decimal places in 4.75, so the product will have a total of four decimal places.
To find the total number of decimal places in a product of two numbers, you add the number of decimal places in each number. If the first number has decimal places to the thousandths (3 decimal places) and the second number has decimal places to the tenths (1 decimal place), the product will have a total of 3 + 1 = 4 decimal places.
When multiplying a number with decimal places to the hundredth (2 decimal places) by a number with decimal places to the tenths (1 decimal place), you add the number of decimal places together. This results in a total of 2 + 1 = 3 decimal places in the product. Therefore, the product will have 3 decimal places.
The product of the GCF and LCM of two numbers is equal to the product of the two numbers. The other number is 126.