No not always because composite numbers can be the product of 2 or more prime factors
Yes
No, You can't change a composite number to prime number.
it is a composite number because you can tell from the 8 that it is an even number, and even numbers can always be divided.
Prime factorization never includes a composite number. All numbers in prime factorization must be prime numbers.
The sum of any two prime numbers is not always a composite number. The sum of 2 and 11 is 13, and 13 is a prime number, not a composite number.
The product of two prime numbers is always a composite number, and it never is a prime number.
the two prime numbers will be factors of that number, which would make that number a composite number
No not always because composite numbers can be the product of 2 or more prime factors
Yes
76 is a composite number. All even numbers, except for 2, are always going to be composite. A prime number is a number that can only be multiplied by 1.
You could try dividing by composite numbers but the number that you are testing is divisible by a composite number, then it will be divisible by a prime factor of that composite number and that prime factor will be smaller. It is always easier to work with smaller numbers.
No composite numbers are prime. A composite number is a number that can be made by multiplying other numbers. A prime number is made only by one and itself. Therefore no number can be both prime and composite
No, You can't change a composite number to prime number.
it is a composite number because you can tell from the 8 that it is an even number, and even numbers can always be divided.
That is correct.
Prime factorization never includes a composite number. All numbers in prime factorization must be prime numbers.