For eight, 2 For ten, 2 and 5
The first ten prime numbers are 2,3,5,7,11,13,17,19,23 and 29.
There are only three factors of 49, which are 1, 7, and 49. There are only two prime factors of 49, which are 7 and 7. There is only one distinct prime factor of 49, which is 7. There are not ten factors of 49.
because it has more than two factors
5 and 13 have no factors because they're prime.
17 is a prime number and only has two factors, one and itself.
No, ten is not the first prime number or a prime number at all. A prime number is a number with only two factors, 1 and itself. Since ten has 2 and 5 as factors as well as 1 and 10, it is not a prime number. 1 by definition is usually considered not a prime number, so 2 is the first prime number
The factors of 10 are 1, 2, 5 and 10. 2 and 5 are prime. A number cannot have factors greater than itself.
it's 2^10, which is decomposable in ten times the prime factor 2. If you replaced any of those 2s by a higher prime, the product would be greater than 2^10. And since there is no smaller prime than 2, this must be the smallest number that is decomposable in ten prime factors. If you meant 10 different prime factors, the answer would be the product of the ten smallest primes 2*3*5*7*11*13*17*19*23*29 which i am too lazy to calculate right now :)
But 2 has only two factors which are itself and one because it is a prime number.
3 is a prime number . Three is the prime number because prime numbers have only two factors 'one' and 'that number'. For example ten is not prime because it has more than two factors .
3 is a prime number . Three is the prime number because prime numbers have only two factors 'one' and 'that number'. For example ten is not prime because it has more than two factors .