2 and 3
I think you mean which of the numbers 2,3,5,6,9 or 10 are 1080 divisible by? All of the numbers can be divided into 1080 and get a whole integer
Two: 1020 and 1080.
1080/45 = 24
1080 is divisible by all of those numbers...1080 divided by 2 = 5401080 divided by 3 = 3601080 divided by 5 = 2161080 divided by 6 = 1801080 divided by 9 = 1201080 divided by 10 = 108
1000, 1020, 1040, 1060, 1080, and 1100
All multiples of 216 (which are infinite) including 216, 432, 648, 864, 1080 . . .
1080
Yes, 60 times.
A four-digit number that meets these criteria is 1080. It is an even number (divisible by 2), divisible by 9 (1080 ÷ 9 = 120), divisible by 10 (1080 ÷ 10 = 108), and divisible by 3 (1080 ÷ 3 = 360). However, it is also divisible by 3, so it does not satisfy your request for a number that is not divisible by 3. Instead, a correct example is 1086, which is even and divisible by 9 (1086 ÷ 9 = 120.67) but not by 3. Hence, no valid 4-digit number meets all criteria simultaneously.
540 and 1080 have an LCM of 1080.
All numbers that are multiples of 270 are divisible by 270. The first 25 numbers in that list are: 270 540 810 1080 1350 1620 1890 2160 2430 2700 2970 3240 3510 3780 4050 4320 4590 4860 5130 5400 5670 5940 6210 6480 6750
The sequence appears to follow a pattern of subtracting 2160 from each number. Starting with 5-30180-1080, the next two numbers would be 5-30180-1080 - 2160 = 5-30178-1080 and then 5-30178-1080 - 2160 = 5-30176-1080. Thus, the next two numbers are 5-30178-1080 and 5-30176-1080.