Every composite number has its own unique tree, so I guess the answer is all numbers have one tree. Perhaps you meant one branch or one factor. Prime numbers only have two factors, one of them is prime, so if you try to do a factor tree with a Prime number, it stops the second you write the number down. And then there's one. One only has one factor, so we won't even bother with a tree. We'll call it a factor twig.
To find the factor tree of 89, we start by dividing 89 by its smallest prime factor, which is 89 itself. This means 89 is a prime number and cannot be factored further. Therefore, the factor tree of 89 consists of only one prime factor, which is 89.
No.
No.
No prime number only has one factor. Each prime number has itself and 1 as factors. Now, the number 1 of course has only one factor, but it is technically not a prime number.
47 | 47,1 Since 47 is a prime number, its only factors are one and itself. It's hardly worth drawing a tree.
199 is a prime number. It does not have a tree since it only has one prime factor, itself.
no
1423 is a prime number and therefore has only two factors which are itself and one
To find the factor tree of 89, we start by dividing 89 by its smallest prime factor, which is 89 itself. This means 89 is a prime number and cannot be factored further. Therefore, the factor tree of 89 consists of only one prime factor, which is 89.
59 is a prime number and as such has only two factors: 1 and 59 A factor tree doesn't make sense for prime numbers since it would only have one branch: the number itself.
A factor tree is one way of notating the process of finding the prime factorization of a given number.
No.
No.
You don't. 41 is a prime number. Prime numbers don't have factor trees, since they only have one prime factor.
13 is a Prime number in its own right because it has only two factors which are itself and one
Only one branch at the bottom of any factor tree.
One is the only number that is a factor of every other number.