We know that a Prime number is a positive integer greater than 1, whose divisors are 1 and itself. We know that the only even prime number is 2. That means that all other prime numbers are odd numbers.
We know that when we add two odd numbers the result is an even number, which are not prime numbers (expect 2, and 2 = 1 + 1 where 1 is odd but is neither prime nor composite). Thus adding two odd prime numbers cannot give us another prime number.
We show that the conclusion follows from the premise:
Assume that r = p + q where all r, p and q are prime numbers, then we have that r is either even or not:
2 + 3 = 5, 2 + 17 = 19, are examples of such numbers.
false
true
No.
what prime numbers have the sum of 54
No, the sum of a prime number and a composite number is not always even.
Sum of what?
sum of the 13th and 14th and 15th prime numbers = 1311st to 12 prime numbers = 2, 3,5,7,11,13,17,19,23,29,31,3713th prime number = 4114th prime number = 4315th prime number = 47=================sum.......................=131
The sum of any two prime numbers may or may not be prime. The sum of the two prime numbers 2 and 3 is the prime number 5, and the sum of the two prime numbers 5 and 7 is the composite number 12.
The sum of two prime numbers greater than 2 is an even number. The sum of 2 and any other prime number is an odd number.
The answer depends on the sum of WHAT!
The sum of any two prime numbers is not always a composite number. The sum of 2 and 11 is 13, and 13 is a prime number, not a composite number.
23