Wiki User
∙ 6y agoI don't have that book in front of me. Perhaps you could ask some of the questions.
Wiki User
∙ 6y agoPrime factorizations are unique. No other number will have exactly the same number of prime factors as 28. Multiples of 14 will have some of the same factors.
Lots of prime numbers have zeros in them. 101, 103, 107 and 109 are all prime numbers. Prime numbers can't end in zero. Numbers that end in zero are multiples of ten and have too many factors to be prime numbers.
Multiples of 6 cannot, by definition, be prime numbers!
Apart from 1, all of the other factors of 72 are multiples of prime factors.
Multiples aren't prime.
23 is prime. Prime numbers don't have proper factors. Its multiples are 23, 46, 69 and so on.
Numbers can't be divided by multiples. They get divided by factors. Factors go into numbers, numbers go into multiples.
No, multiples of prime numbers are composite.
Prime factorizations are unique. No other number will have exactly the same number of prime factors as 28. Multiples of 14 will have some of the same factors.
The set of prime factors of the numbers from 1 to 15,000 would be the set of prime numbers between 1 and 15,000. The link below has a list of the first 10,000 prime numbers, so if you take the primes less than 15,000, you will have the set of prime factors of the first 15,000 numbers. For prime factors of individual numbers, check the related question, "What are the prime factors of the numbers from 1 to 200?" Also check for WikiAnswers questions in the form of "What are the prime factors of __?" and "What are the factors and prime factors of __?"
All the numbers from 2 to 19 are multiples of prime numbers.
Lots of prime numbers have zeros in them. 101, 103, 107 and 109 are all prime numbers. Prime numbers can't end in zero. Numbers that end in zero are multiples of ten and have too many factors to be prime numbers.
Multiples of 6 cannot, by definition, be prime numbers!
Apart from 1, all of the other factors of 72 are multiples of prime factors.
25 and 28 are both multiples of 1. The prime factors of 25 are 5 and 5. The prime factors of 28 are 2, 2, and 7. The two numbers do not share any prime factors, so their greatest common divisor is 1.
Multiples aren't prime.
No, prime numbers have only two factors: 1 and itself. Composite numbers have at least 3 factors.