A way to do this is to spot any obvious prime factors. In this case, 275 ends in a 5 and so is divisible by 5. Doing that gives 275/5 = 55. This is now clearly the product of 5 and 11, from times tables. Thus 275 as a product of prime numbers is 5x5x11
5, 55
No, the product of two prime numbers is unique.
The product of two prime numbers will be composite.
A number as a product of prime numbers would be "x".
The multiplication answer of the prime numbers, so if you multiply them, the answer is called the product
The product of two prime numbers is always a composite number, and it never is a prime number.
The prime factorization of 275 is 5x5x11.
It is 11 and as a product of its prime factors: 5*5*11 = 275
No, the product of two prime numbers is unique.
The product is exactly 376 since that is what the prime numbers for 376 are!The product is exactly 376 since that is what the prime numbers for 376 are!The product is exactly 376 since that is what the prime numbers for 376 are!The product is exactly 376 since that is what the prime numbers for 376 are!
The product of two prime numbers will be composite.
A number as a product of prime numbers would be "x".
The LCM of a set of prime numbers is their product.
A composite number is the product of two or more prime numbers.
Prime factorization is writing a composite number as a product of prime numbers.
It is impossible for the product of two prime numbers to be prime. It is impossible for the sum of two prime numbers to be prime as long as one of the numbers isn't 2.
No, the product of 2 prime numbers is not always even. If one of the prime numbers is 2, then the product will be even. However, if both prime numbers are odd, then the product will be odd.
The multiplication answer of the prime numbers, so if you multiply them, the answer is called the product