7 17 37
An infinite number of prime numbers contain one or more zeroes, though a prime number, always being odd, cannot end in a zero. The first four prime numbers containing zeroes are 101, 103, 107 and 109.
The Egyptians were the first people to have some knowledge in prime numbers. Though, the earliest known record are Euclid's Elements, which contain the important theorem of prime numbers. The Ancient Greeks, including Euclid, were the first people to find prime numbers. Euclid constructed the Mersenne prime to work out the infinite number of primes.
Every member of that infinite list is different.
Yes - there are an infinite number of prime numbers. The first prime number after 100100 is 100103.
All prime numbers are odd, exept of the first prime number 2.
2 and 3 are the first two prime numbers. The difference between them is 1
Just multiply the first five prime numbers! 2x3x5x7x11 = 6x35x11 = 210x11 = 2310. Any multiple of this number "has the first five prime numbers as factors", but 2310 is the smallest such number.
The first two prime numbers add up to another prime number.
The first prime numbers are 2, 3, 5, 7, 11. When multiplied together the product is 2310. It is the smallest number that has the first five numbers as its factors.
2 is the smallest prime number.
Two is the ONLY even prime number.
The smallest number divisible by first four prime numbers is 2x3x5x7 = 210.