We can't answer this if you don't provide a range since new higher prime numbers get discovered every year or so. Since the lowest Prime number is 2, the product will be whatever the highest prime number is doubled.
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No, the product of two prime numbers is unique.
The product of two prime numbers will be composite.
No.-------------------------------------------------------------To find the HCF and LCM of two (or more) numbers list the numbers in their prime factorisations in power format; then:HCF = product of the primes to the LOWEST power across all the numbers;LCM = product of the primes to the HIGHEST power across all the numbers.Note: for p being any prime, p⁰ = 1; so if a prime does not appear as a factor of a number, it can be said to have a power of 0. This means that the LOWEST power is 0 and the prime does not appear in the HCF of the numbers. The HIGHEST power of a prime must be at least the LOWEST power of a prime.Thus if a prime appears in the HCF of the numbers (with a power greater than or equal to 1) it MUST also appear in the LCM of the numbers.If the HCF of some numbers is 15, then: 15 = 3 × 5 which means that the primes 3 and 5 MUST both apear in the LCM.But 175 = 5² × 7, which does NOT include 3, so 175 CANNOT be the LCM of some numbers which have a HCF of 15.
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