This question doesn't quite make sense; a Prime number has no factors.
If you meant a prime whose digits sum to 10 it is 37.
Well, the factors of a prime number is that they only have two factors.
All numbers have factors. Some factors are prime numbers. These are known as prime factors. The set of prime factors is a subset of the set of factors for any given number.
They are prime factors.
No difference. Once you've found the factors of a number, the prime numbers on that list are the prime factors.
When you multiply two prime numbers together they become factors of the number that they equal. Since the number will have factors other than 1 and itself, the number cannot be prime.
Prime factors are factors that are prime. For example, 13 is a prime number and 13 is a factor of 26. So that means 13 is a prime factor.
1 is the only number between 1 and 100 that has too few factors to be a prime number.
All numbers have factors. Some factors are prime numbers, some are not.
The prime factors of 99 are 3 * 3 * 11.
It is when the prime factors of whole number are multiplied together that they equal that number. For example the prime factors of 21 are 3 and 7 so 3*7 = 21
A prime number is a whole number that has two factors which are itself and one. where as, A composite number has factors in addition to one and itself.
The product of two prime factors is the result of multiplying the two prime numbers together.