Since 50 < n < 100, n is a 2-digit number.
Since the sum of the digits is 11, n could be 56, 65, 74, 83, or 92, but since n is divided (evenly) by 2 and the quotient is a prime integer, then n must be 74 (74÷2 = 37).
A prime number is any number that can only be divided by itself and 1 and a whole number be the result. For example, the number 3. A composite number is a number that can be divided by more than just itself and 1. For example 6 (it can be divided by 6, 3, 2, and 1) 207 is a composite number - It can be divided by 3 and 9 as well as 207 and 1. composite 3*69
Yes and it is also a prime number
The square root of 512 is neither an integer, nor even a rational number, so it has no prime factorization.
89 is a prime number; this means that it can only be divided by 1 and itself, 89.
No way, it can be divided even by 2.
7 is a prime number, that means it can only be divided by itself or 1, with the result being an integer (whole number).
No, reversing the order of the digits of a two-digit prime number does not always result in a prime number.
No.
Not by any integer; it is a prime number.
Prime means that the integer can only be divided by itself and 1.
11 is the only prime number with identical digits. After 11 all numbers with identical digits can be divided by atleast 11 or 3.
The answer is 1. The smallest prime is 2 and the greatest prime (of however many digits) must be odd. The remainder of ANY odd number when divided by 2 must be 1.
102
A whole number that cannot be divided evenly by anything but itself and 1.
As of January 2017 , the largest known prime number is 2^74,207,281 − 1, a number with 22,338,618 digits.
13 is a prime number - it can only be divided by 1 and itself (for an integer answer).
Here are the prime numbers between 10 and 30: 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29 Prime numbers are those numbers which cannot be divided to give an integer result except when divided by themselves or by 1.