Yes.
If one is zero, then the product is always zero.(Think about it ... you take 279 zero times. How much do you have ?)
Any product of any list of factors is zero, if one of the factors is zero.
The product of a number of factors can be zero only if one of them is zero.So, if a given expression is zero, you factorise it and then, by the above rule, the statement is true if any one of the factors is zero. You therefore set each factor equal to zero to find the different possible solutions.
It can't always be true. What if an inverse relationship crosses the origin, or one of the axes? In that case, at least one of the values (and therefore the product) will be zero.
When you multiply numbers together, the factors of the product are the factors of all of the multiplicands, and every even number includes at least one factor of 2.
Why the product of a multiple of ten and a multiple of ten will always have only one zero
If one is zero, then the product is always zero.(Think about it ... you take 279 zero times. How much do you have ?)
The sign of the factors. These are the rules: * If there is a zero factor, the product is zero. * If there is an even number of negative factors (two, four, six, etc. odd factors), the product is positive. * If there is an odd number of negative factors (one, three, five, etc. odd factors), the productd is negative.
Any product of any list of factors is zero, if one of the factors is zero.
The product of a number of factors can be zero only if one of them is zero.So, if a given expression is zero, you factorise it and then, by the above rule, the statement is true if any one of the factors is zero. You therefore set each factor equal to zero to find the different possible solutions.
Provided that the rational number is not 0, the product is irrational.
Anytime you multiply a number by zero, the product will always be zero. Thus, whenever a number, regardless of its value, is multiplied by zero, there is only one possible solution: zero.
This can be solved algebraically: x2 = x x2 - x = 0 x (x - 1) = 0 A product is zero when one of the factors is zero, so x is either zero, or one.
The product of two integers will be: * Zero, if one factor, or both, are zero. * Positive, if both factors have the same sign (both positive, or both negative) * Negative, if the two factors have different signs. Actually, these rules apply to all real numbers, not just to integers.
It can't always be true. What if an inverse relationship crosses the origin, or one of the axes? In that case, at least one of the values (and therefore the product) will be zero.
No. 36 divided by 4 = 9
Anything times zero is zero.