One way to check: The product of the original two numbers is equal to the product of their GCF and LCM. If you divide that product by their GCF, you will get the LCM.
The LCM is 275 and the GCF is 55
The GCF is 6 and the LCM is 36,192.
Gcf: 4 lcm: 576
The GCF is 6. The LCM is 360.
LCM and GCF are almost never equal.
Since the product of two numbers is equal to the product of their GCF and LCM, the GCF of two numbers is equal to their product divided by their LCM and their LCM is equal to their product divided by their GCF.
The product of the GCF and LCM is equal to the product of the original two numbers.
only if they are equal
The LCM of two numbers multiplied by their GCF will equal the product of the original numbers. If you know the LCM, divide it into the product. The result will be the GCF.
The product of the GCF and LCM of a pair of numbers is equal to the product of the numbers.
GCF - Greatest Common Factor (GCF is always smaller or equal to at least one of the numbers) LCM - Least Common Multiple (LCM is always greater or equal to at least one of the numbers)
The GCF of two numbers multiplied by their LCM will equal the product of the original numbers. If you know the GCF, divide it into the product of the two. The result will be the LCM. If the GCF of two numbers is 1, the LCM is their product.
False, they're rarely equal. GCF of 12 and 4 is 4 LCM of 12 and 4 is 12
One way to check: The product of the original two numbers is equal to the product of their GCF and LCM. If you divide that product by their GCF, you will get the LCM.
Only if you're comparing a number to itself. The GCF and the LCM of 10 and 10 is 10.
The product of the original numbers is equal to the product of the GCF and LCM. Divide the product of the LCM and GCF by the one number. The answer will be the other.