The prime factorization.
The breaking down of a composite number into its prime number factors.
No. Those two non-prime numbers will be factors, so it could not be prime.
a composite number seems a reasonable answer.
If you multiply 2 prime numbers. the result will never be prime. A prime number is one that has no factors except itself and one. The number specified in the question has as factors the 2 prime numbers cited.
A prime number must have exactly two factors, 1 and the number itself. 1 is not a prime because its only factor is 1.
Prime factorization is the result of expressing a number as the product of its prime factors. It will assist you in finding the GCF and LCM of any given number set.
Any square of a prime number. For example, 5*5 = 25 has the factors 1, 5, 25. If you square any other prime number, call it "p", the factors of the result are 1, p, p square.
Oh, dude, of course! A composite number is just a number that can be broken down into smaller numbers, like a Lego set. And prime factors are the prime numbers that multiply together to give you that composite number. So, like, yeah, you can totally factor a composite number into prime factors. It's like breaking down a complicated recipe into its basic ingredients.
If you multiply all the prime factors you've found together and the result is the number, you have found all of them.
There is not such a thing as a composite prime number. A prime number has exactly two factors. A composite number has more than two factors.
Seeing that 2, 3, and 5 are all prime numbers, I multiplied them together for a result of 30.
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.