I can't draw a venn diagram, but this will be close. 2 in the left circle, 24 in the intersection (the gcf), and 3 in the right circle. (2(24)3)=144 which is the LCM.
Using a Venn diagram for this problem is overkill, since 6 is a multiple of 3 and will automatically be the LCM of this problem. But if you insist... Put a 3 in the left circle and put a 6 in the space where the two circles intersect.
The GCF of two numbers multiplied by their LCM will equal the product of the original numbers. If you know the GCF, divide it into the product of the two. The result will be the LCM. If the GCF of two numbers is 1, the LCM is their product.
Venn diagrams are used in a number of different ways and the answer to the question will depend on whether you are looking at finding the LCM or HCF, or looking at conditional probabilities, for example. The question needs to be more specific.
The GCF is 68, the LCM is 68
The GCF and LCM of 24 and 42 are 6 and 168 respectively.
Using a Venn diagram for this problem is overkill, since 6 is a multiple of 3 and will automatically be the LCM of this problem. But if you insist... Put a 3 in the left circle and put a 6 in the space where the two circles intersect.
You can, but there are more efficient ways to find the LCM.
Put 12, 24, 36 and 48 in the left circle. Put 15, 30 and 45 in the right circle. Put 60, the LCM, in the space where they intersect.
The GCF is 6. That makes the LCM 42.
The GCF of 6 and 16 is 2. The LCM is the product of 6 and 16 (96) divided by the GCF (2) The LCM is 48.
That's a bit of unnecessary work. The LCM of 3 and 6 is 6, because 6 is a multiple of 3.
The GCF of two numbers multiplied by their LCM will equal the product of the original numbers. If you know the GCF, divide it into the product of the two. The result will be the LCM. If the GCF of two numbers is 1, the LCM is their product.
The GCF is 1. That means the LCM is the two numbers multiplied together, or 210.
The GCF is 14.42 x 56 divided by 14 equals 168, the LCM
Venn diagrams are used in a number of different ways and the answer to the question will depend on whether you are looking at finding the LCM or HCF, or looking at conditional probabilities, for example. The question needs to be more specific.
The GCF is 12. The LCM is 360.
The GCF is 4.