167 is a prime so the only two distinct positive whole numbers that multiply to 167 are 1 and 167. Their sum is 168.
167
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When you multiply two prime numbers together they become factors of the number that they equal. Since the number will have factors other than 1 and itself, the number cannot be prime.
2*17
167 is a prime so the only two distinct positive whole numbers that multiply to 167 are 1 and 167. Their sum is 168.
167
How about: 167+2 = 169
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When you multiply two prime numbers together they become factors of the number that they equal. Since the number will have factors other than 1 and itself, the number cannot be prime.
167 is a prime number. The only two factors of a prime number are 1 and itself.The two factors of 167 are 1 and 167. There are only two factors of a prime number.The only factor pair of 167 is 1 x 167. There is only one factor pair of a prime number.The proper factors of 167 are only 1 or,if the definition you are using excludes 1, there are none.The only prime factor of 167 is 167. There is only one prime factor of a prime number - itself.The distinct prime factor (listing each prime factor only once) of 167 is also 167.The prime factorization of 167 is 167. In some cases, to emphasize that it is prime, you might write the prime factorization as 1 x 167.NOTE: There cannot be common factors, a greatest common factor, or a least common multiple because "common" refers to factors or multiples that two or more numbers have in common.
Prime numbers only have two factors, one and themselves. If you multiply two prime numbers together, the new number will also have the two prime numbers as factors, making it composite. Try it out. 5 and 7 are prime. 35 is composite.
2*17
13*31=403 13 and 31 are prime numbers.
When they have no common prime factors.
The prime factors of 51 are 3 and 17.
It is not possible to multiply two prime numbers and get 90. You can add 43 and 47.