You get a number that's equal to their sum.
The sum is an odd number that's greater than either of them, one greater than
double the smaller one, and one less than double the bigger one.
2 and 3 are consecutive numbers that are prime.
Any pair of consecutive integers is co-prime.
If you mean consecutive numbers that are prime? than the answer is 2,3 are consecutive numbers which are prime. except for this pair it is impossible for consecutive numbers to be prime because every second number is multiple of 2
2 and 3 are a pair
Any pair of consecutive numbers will have an odd total. 10 and 12 are consecutive even numbers that total 22.
yes
All of the numbers in that range are consecutive. If you're asking about prime numbers, it's just 2 and 3.
There is only one pair of consecutive prime numbers, and the prime numbers are two and three, because any pair of consecutive numbers has one odd and one even number, and two is the only even prime number, because all other even numbers can be divided by two, and the only pairs of consecutive numbers are one and two and three, but one is not prime because it only has one factor, thus making the only consecutive pair of primes two and three. But the problem asks for the product of the two numbers, not the numbers themselves, so just multiply two and three together to get a final result of six.
Any consecutive even numbers.
Any consecutive even numbers have a GCF of 2.
evaluate
Yes, there is exactly one even number between every pair of consecutive odd numbers; I hope that is what the typing-challenged questioner meant.