There are no two prime numbers that equal 960 when multiplied together. Prime factorization of 960 is 2x2x2x2x2x2x3x5 or 26x3x5.
They are: 11*11 = 121
103 is already prime.
There cannot be such a pair. a2 and b2 when multiplied together give a2b2 = (ab)2 So if two square numbers are multiplied together, their product is a square. 12 is not a square so the two numbers cannot exist.
The simplest answer for two numbers is 1 and 121. The most popular would be 11x11 however.
There are no two prime numbers that equal 960 when multiplied together. Prime factorization of 960 is 2x2x2x2x2x2x3x5 or 26x3x5.
51 and 2
7 multiplied by 17
They are: 11*11 = 121
Prime numbers are multiplied together in the same way as any integers may be multiplied together.
103 is already prime.
There cannot be such a pair. a2 and b2 when multiplied together give a2b2 = (ab)2 So if two square numbers are multiplied together, their product is a square. 12 is not a square so the two numbers cannot exist.
3 and 12
The simplest answer for two numbers is 1 and 121. The most popular would be 11x11 however.
Factors are numbers that can be multiplied together to get other numbers. Factors are important in algebra and algebra II.
1 and 57 but there are other combinations. 2 and 28.5 etc
They cannot be integers or whole numbers; but they can be numbers with decimals. There are many possibilities; if the numbers are the same, then that is the square root of 10000000 which is 3162.277666...repeating. Those same numbers multiplied together = 10000000. If numbers are different, there are other combinations, all involving decimals