there has to be another number for there to be an LCM
lcm(16xy, 3x) = 48xy
48xy
Ah, isn't finding the least common multiple a joyous journey? The LCM of 4x and 3x is simply 12x, my friend. Just like painting a happy little tree, finding the LCM brings harmony and balance to your mathematical landscape.
x2 + 48x + 320
9x2 + 6x + 1 = 9x2 + 3x + 3x + 1 = 3x(3x + 1) + 1(3x + 1) = (3x + 1)(3x + 1) or (3x +1)2
lcm(16xy, 3x) = 48xy
48xy
The LCM is 60c.
The LCM is 30xy.
15x
Since there are no common factors, just multiply everything: 3x times 2y = 6xy
Since 9x^6 is a multiple of 3x^5, it is automatically the LCM.
Ah, isn't finding the least common multiple a joyous journey? The LCM of 4x and 3x is simply 12x, my friend. Just like painting a happy little tree, finding the LCM brings harmony and balance to your mathematical landscape.
The least common multiple (LCM) of two numbers is the smallest multiple that is divisible by both numbers. In this case, the LCM of x and 3x is the smallest multiple that can be divided evenly by both x and 3x. Since 3x is a multiple of x (3 times x), the LCM of x and 3x would simply be 3x.
x2 + 48x + 320
3x + 3x + 3x = 3* (3x) = 9x
3x^5 If these are 5 of 3x multiplied together the it must be (3x)^5 =3^5 times x^5