The fourth Fibonacci number is 3, so the only possible answer is "3". It does indeed look as if every fourth number after that is a multiple of 3.
No, 1 is a factor of every whole number because 1 is a factor of every whole number.
1 im sure is the factor of every whole number
As stated, that is false. Every number is not a factor of 1. 1 is a factor of every nonzero whole number.
1
Yes
If you start with 1, the common factors are 1 and 3. If you start with zero, as Fibonacci did, the common factor is 1.
The number 5 is a factor of every 5th number in the Fibonacci sequence. This is because every 5th Fibonacci number can be expressed as a linear combination of the Fibonacci numbers preceding it, and the pattern shows that they are all divisible by 5. For example, the 5th Fibonacci number is 5, the 10th is 55, and the 15th is 610, all of which are multiples of 5.
Every fourth one.
1 is a factor of every number.1 is a factor of every number.
One is a factor of every number.
2
yes it is a factor for every number.
Every third number in the Fibonacci sequence is even. This pattern arises because the Fibonacci sequence alternates between odd and even numbers, specifically following the sequence of odd, odd, even. As a result, every third term, starting with the first even number (2), is consistently even: 2, 8, 34, and so on.
No, 1 is a factor of every whole number because 1 is a factor of every whole number.
1 is a factor of every number.
Every number has a factor.
One is the only number that is a factor of every other number.