Any pair of prime numbers. 5 and 7 11 and 13
No. You can only find the LCM of at least two numbers, prime or otherwise. The LCM of any two prime numbers is their product.
How about: 4 and 5
30 and 60
3 and 17
I guess you mean: The LCM of two prime numbers is 119; what are the two prime numbers? 119 = 7 x 17 The two prime numbers are 7 and 17.
There aren't two prime numbers whose LCM is 90.There aren't two prime numbers whose total is 23.Other than that...The two numbers you are looking for are 5 and 18, but only one of them is prime.
3 and 17
13 and 3
The LCM of 60 and 18 is 180
This question feels incomplete, but as written the LCM is 2.
When the numbers are co-prime, ie have no common factor. Simplest example is 2 & 3 whose LCM is 6
7 and 17 are both primes numbers. The means that to find the LCM we need multiply them. The LCM of 7 and 17 is 7x17 which is 119. If two numbers are prime, then they are also relatively prime and in general the way to find the LCM of relatively prime number is to multiply them together.
Any pair of prime numbers. 5 and 7 11 and 13
The LCM of a set of prime numbers is their product.
The LCM of the given three numbers is 476
When two numbers are relatively prime, the LCM will be their product.