No, a Prime number is only divisible by itself and one. And since one doesn't count as a prime number, no.
No. That isn't possible: A prime number, by definition, has no smaller factors. A square number does have a smaller factor - the number that is squared.
The prime factors of a squared number are the prime factors, if any, of its square root.
A prime number is only divisible by itself and 1... A squared number is a multiple of itself - and thus is not a prime number !
A prime number is a positive integer with two factors: one and the number itself. A squared number is any integer multiplied by itself. With the exception of 1, all squared numbers are composite.
91 is neither a prime nor a squared number. It is a composite having the prime factors 7 x 13.
No because then it will have more than two factors
It is not possible for any multiple of a prime number to be prime.
It is impossible to list all squared prime numbers as there is an infinite number of squared prime numbers starting with 4, 9, 25, 49, 121, 169, 289, 361, 529, 841,...
31 squared = 961. 32 squared = 1,024. The first prime number that is greater than 32 is 37. Therefore, 37 is the first prime number whose square exceeds 1,000.
2
The least 2-digit prime number is 11. Thus, 11 squared is 121.
The prime number between 4 and 7 is 5. So 5 squared is 25.