There isn't a prime number between 63 and 65
X=13
Well, honey, let me break it down for you. The prime factors of 65 are 5 and 13. The prime factors of 104 are 2, 2, 2, and 13. So, the common prime factor between 65 and 104 is 13. Glad I could clear that up for you, darling.
compositeSixty-five is a composite number because it is divisible by five. If a number can be divide by another one, then that number is composite. Numbers like 3, 5, 7, and 11 are all prime numbers because they cannot be divided by any other number.65 is composite, as is any number of 2 or more digits ending in 5.
The prime factors of 65 are 5 and 13.
No 65 is not prime since it has factors of 1 and 65 or 1*65=65 and 5 and 13 or 5*13=65. Prime numbers have only 1 and that number as its factors.
There isn't a prime number between 63 and 65
Nope - you can divide it by 5 to get 13. So the prime factors of 65 are 5, 13
5 x 13 = 65
do you mean the prime factors? 65 = 13 x 5 so its prime factors are 13 and 5
It's 65 65 is not prime; it is divisible by 5 and 13. The next prime after 63 is 67.
The Least Common Multiple (LCM) for 13 26 65 is 130.
It is 1 which is not a prime number
It is a composite number.
no it is no6t a prime 65 number
67 is prime.
13