I'm not too sure but i think that 1 and 10 are both factors. 100 as well.
48 has 10 factors, the most factors of any number under 50.
There isn't any, and it is quite simple to prove that. Suppose there is a number with the most factors and suppose that number is X. Now consider Y = 2*X. Y has all the factors of X and it has another factor, which is 2. So Y has more factors than X. This contradicts the statement that X has the most factors. Therefore, there is no number with the most factors.
512 has 9 prime factors
180 has 18 factors.
8192 has 13 prime factors
I am not sure but I suggest 7200, with 54 factors.
48 does.
All prime numbers have exactly two factors. There is not a prime number below 50 that has the most factors since they all have the same number of factors.
60, 72, 84, 90 and 96 each have 12 factors.
45, 63, 75 and 99 all have 6.
0, since every integer is a factor of 0.However, if the answer must be a positive integer, then 7560 has 64 factors (including 1 and itself).
There is NO number with the most number of factors.
It is impossible to determine what number has the most factors because there are an infinite number of numbers.
There is no such number with "most factors"; if you have a number with a certain number of factors, you can always multiply it by 2, or by 3, etc., to get another number that has even more factors.
48 has 10 factors, the most factors of any number under 50.
48. The factors are 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, 16, 24, 48. This question is in your math book isn't it?
48 does.