They are: 2*37 = 74
There are no two numbers whose product is 23 and whose sum is 10. 23 is a prime number, and the only numbers whose product is 23 are 23 and 1. A prime number can only be divided by itself and 1.
two prime numbers whose product is 141 = 3 & 47
3 and 7 are prime numbers whose product is 21.
1 and 2, whose product is 2.
17 and 3 are two prime numbers whose sum is 20. Their product is 51.
There are not two prime numbers whose product is 64. The prime factorization of 64 is 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 2, which is 2 to the 6th power. These are the only prime numbers that can be multiplied together to result in 64. There are six of them, not two. The only pair of numbers whose product is 64 that includes one prime number is 2 x 32, but only one number is prime.
The product of the prime numbers 19 and 23 is 437.
Any prime number multiplied by 2 as for example 2*7 = 14
There are no such numbers.
No, because a prime number that has only two factors, 1(which is niether prime nor composite) and itself(prime).
There are only two prime numbers that are consecutive numbers, 2 and 3. Their product is 2 x 3 = 6. The first prime numbers are 2, 3, 5, and 7 and the only two consecutive prime numbers whose product is a single digit are 2 and 3. (The next two consecutive prime numbers, 3 and 5, have a two-digit product.)
2 and 5