10 has no perfect square factors (other than the trivial factor 1).
Thghj
No. Look at the prime factors of 65: there are no repeated prime factors, therefore this number contains no perfect square.
it is not a perfect square since there is no integer, say x, where x^2=6. however, 6 is a perfect number. this is because its factors(aside from itself), add up to the number 6 itself-- 1+2+3=6.
Except in this case, the largest square factor is 1.
The perfect square factor of 50 is 25 and the perfect square factor for 90 is 9. The perfect square factors for 50x90 25x9. Of course we also have the other factors of 2 and 2x5.
50 is a not perfect square.
All numbers have factors. Some factors are perfect squares. We call these perfect square factors. 9 is a perfect square factor of 27.
No, 50 is not a perfect square.
It depends on the number that it is a perfect square of!
Since 50 contains no perfect square among its factors, you can't simplify the root of 50.
A perfect square has an odd number of factors.
No, it is not.
The same number is multiplied with itself to form a perfect square i.e. a perfect square has real and repeated equal numbers as factors.
A perfect square has an odd number of factors. Factors of numbers always come in pairs -- except for perfect squares. Since the square root of a perfect square is listed only once on the list of factors, it results in a list with an odd number of factors.
YEs
No, it is not. A perfect square is the product of two equal integers; i.e. 9 is a perfect square. It can be expressed as 3*3. There is no number that when multiplied twice equals 50.