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3000. It contains non-repeating 3 as a factor.
yes , 11
1 is not a prime number, so it wouldn't be present in any prime factorization. Prime numbers don't really have factorizations, that is, the factorization is the number itself. There are prime numbers greater than 100.
yes
64
3000. It contains non-repeating 3 as a factor.
Multiply them out.
Yes. Any prime number greater than 100 has only itself in its prime factorization. Examples: The prime factorization of 101 is 101. The prime factorization of 109 is 109. The prime factorization of 127 is 127. The prime factorization of 311 is 311. The prime factorization of 691 is 691.
yes , 11
If the prime factorization contains a 5 and a 7, 35 is a factor.
567
1 is not a prime number, so it wouldn't be present in any prime factorization. Prime numbers don't really have factorizations, that is, the factorization is the number itself. There are prime numbers greater than 100.
It is a true statement.
yes
Those are composite numbers.
Take any three prime numbers and repeat according to the instructions. If your number is not large enough, try with larger prime numbers. Especially if you increase the number that repeats thrice, you'll quickly get large numbers.
A repeating decimal is a decimal that contains a series of numbers that repeat indefinitely. Examples include: 3.44444... 4.565656... 2.356356356... An ellipsis (...) at the end of the decimal signals that it repeats indefinitely.