The LCM of a set of prime numbers is their product.
When two numbers are relatively prime, the LCM will be their product.
No. You can only find the LCM of at least two numbers, prime or otherwise. The LCM of any two prime numbers is their product.
Numbers that are relatively prime have their LCM as their product.
When all of them are prime numbers,then just multiply the numbers to get the LCM of those 3 numbers.
Product of the two prime numbers is the LCM. For example 3, 7 have 21 as LCM
The Least Common Multiple (LCM) of two prime numbers is the product of the two prime numbers. This is because prime numbers only have themselves and 1 as factors, so their LCM is simply their product.
The LCM of two numbers is the product of the numbers if one of the numbers is a prime. Since 11 is a prime, the LCM of 10 and 11 is 110 (10 x 11). If neither number had been a prime, the LCM would have been the product of all the prime factors of the numbers to their greatest power.
prime numbers, co-prime numbers
If the second number is a multiple of the prime number, than the LCM is the second number. If the second number is not a multiple of the prime number, then the two numbers are relatively prime, and the LCM is the product of the two numbers.
The LCM of two numbers is one of the numbers when one of the numbers is a multiple of the other. The LCM of two numbers is the product of the numbers when they are relatively prime. In all other cases (like consecutive even numbers that aren't 2 and 4) the LCM is as you describe.
The LCM is: 35