LCM = Product/HCF = 384
Yes: product of a & b = LCM x HCF so b = (LCM x HCF)/a
The product of the two numbers
You find the HCF of the two numbers, not their product. Example: 30 and 42 Factor them. 2 x 3 x 5 = 30 2 x 3 x 7 = 42 Select the common factors. 2 x 3 = 6, the HCF
The GCF is 36.
LCM = product/HCF so product = LCM/HCF in this case 380/16 which is 23.75, so the answer to your question is no.
384
Yes: product of a & b = LCM x HCF so b = (LCM x HCF)/a
if the product of two numbers is 810 if there hcf is 9 find Lcm
To find the LCM, you multiply the numbers together and then divide by the HCF. In this case, we don't know the numbers, but we have the HCF (13) and we have the product of the numbers (1690). Thus all you do is divide 1690 by 13 to get: 1690/13 = 130 And thus the LCM of two numbers whose hcf is 13 and product is 1690 is 130.
The product of the GCF and LCM of two numbers is equal to the product of the two numbers. The other number is 126.
The product of the two numbers
to find a factor of a number you have to 1. find the hcf (highest common factor) 2. find how many times the hcf goes into your number AND THAT IS YOUR ANSWER!
The product of the GCF and LCM of a pair of numbers is equal to the product of the numbers.
You find the HCF of the two numbers, not their product. Example: 30 and 42 Factor them. 2 x 3 x 5 = 30 2 x 3 x 7 = 42 Select the common factors. 2 x 3 = 6, the HCF
The GCF is 36.
The answer is as follows:The prime factorisation of the two number is:18 = 2*3*324 = 2*2*2*3The HCF is the product every number which appears in both lists (repeated appearances mean repeated inclusion in HCF):HCF = 2*3 = 6
Yes.First find the HCF of two of the numbers, then find the HCF of that answer and the third number.In this way you could find the HCF of as many numbers as you want.