No, it would not.
Prime number next to any prime number is called consecutive prime number. Eg:- 2,3,5,7 are prime numbers
3 consecutive numbers cannot be prime factors. Any three consecutive numbers would include at least one even number. The only even prime number is 2, and (2,3,4) doesn't qualify.
Yes, 2 and 3 are consecutive prime numbers.
2 and 3 are the only consecutive prime numbers.
No. Any three consecutive numbers will have at least one of them which is divisible by 2, which means it cannot be prime. And since 1 is not considered a prime number, it cannot happen.
If you mean consecutive numbers that are prime? than the answer is 2,3 are consecutive numbers which are prime. except for this pair it is impossible for consecutive numbers to be prime because every second number is multiple of 2
17 is the only prime number that is the sum of four consecutive prime numbers. 2 + 3 + 5 + 7 = 17
2 and 3
no
Yes.Additional Information:If you have two consecutive numbers, one of them will be an odd number and the other will be an even number. Since even numbers are divisible by 2, the only even prime number is 2. If two consecutive numbers are prime, the even number must be 2. So, because 1 is not a prime number, the only time that two consecutive numbers can be prime is in the case of 2 and 3.
There is no prime number between 60 and 80 that has a consecutive sum. The prime numbers between 60 and 80 are 61, 67, and 71, but none of them have consecutive sums.
No other prime numbers are consecutive because there aren't any other even prime numbers.