The product of two prime numbers will be composite.
It is impossible for the product of two prime numbers to be prime. It is impossible for the sum of two prime numbers to be prime as long as one of the numbers isn't 2.
No, the product of two prime numbers is unique.
The product of any two numbers, neither of which is 1, is never a prime number.
two prime numbers whose product is 141 = 3 & 47
A composite number is the product of two or more prime numbers.
The product of two prime numbers is always a composite number, and it never is a prime number.
No
No - because its factors include each of the two prime numbers.
When the numbers are co-prime.
There are only two prime numbers that are consecutive numbers, 2 and 3. Their product is 2 x 3 = 6. The first prime numbers are 2, 3, 5, and 7 and the only two consecutive prime numbers whose product is a single digit are 2 and 3. (The next two consecutive prime numbers, 3 and 5, have a two-digit product.)
The product of two prime numbers can never be another prime number, the numbers that you multiplied are factors of the product. (example, 9 times 5 is 45, 9 and 5 go into 45)