The LCM of 2 numbers can be one of those numbers when the large of the 2 numbers is 2 times the smaller one of those numbers. For example the LCM of 2 and 4 is 4. For example the LCM of 5 and 10 is 10.
No, the only way the GCF and LCM of two numbers can be the same is if the numbers are the same.
Yes. If one number is a factor of the other, the greater number will be the LCM of the two.
Yes,LCM of two numbers is their product.
The product of the GCF and the LCM of two numbers is equal to the product of the original two numbers. Multiply the GCF and the LCM. The original two numbers will be another factor pair of that total. Find the factor pair that has that GCF and LCM.
The LCM of two numbers is one of the numbers when one of the numbers is a multiple of the other. The LCM of two numbers is the product of the numbers when they are relatively prime. In all other cases (like consecutive even numbers that aren't 2 and 4) the LCM is as you describe.
When one of two numbers is a multiple of the other, the LCM is the larger number.
The LCM of 2 numbers can be one of those numbers when the large of the 2 numbers is 2 times the smaller one of those numbers. For example the LCM of 2 and 4 is 4. For example the LCM of 5 and 10 is 10.
The LCM of one number is itself. LCM involves two or more numbers.
The LCM is the larger number.
The LCM of one number is itself. LCM requires two or more numbers to solve for the LCM.
The LCM is the one that is the multiple.
The LCM of one number is itself. LCM involves two or more numbers.
It is not possible to give a sensible answer to this question. The least common multiple (LCM) refers to a multiple that is COMMON to two or more numbers. You have only one number in the question!
You need at least two numbers to find an LCM. And they need to be whole numbers, not fractions.
The LCM of one number is itself. LCM involves two or more numbers.
The LCM of one number is itself, and LCM usually involves two numbers or more.