There is no Prime number from one to a hundred that has more factors than any other prime number. By definition, a prime number has exactly two factors, 1 and itself. The number 1 has only one factor - itself. All prime numbers have exactly the same number of factors - two. Composite numbers have more than two factors.
Prime numbers only have two factors, one and the number itself.
the number 90 has the most factors under 100
2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 = 64
If a number has 5 factors then it most certainly is not prime. Hence there is some confusion as to what you are asking here.
Kind of. The only prime number that is even is 2.
Prime numbers only have two factors, one and the number itself.
the number 90 has the most factors under 100
2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 = 64
512 has 9 prime factors
8192 has 13 prime factors
If a number has 5 factors then it most certainly is not prime. Hence there is some confusion as to what you are asking here.
All prime numbers have exactly two factors. There is not a prime number below 50 that has the most factors since they all have the same number of factors.
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Unless you specify a range, there will always be a number with more prime factors. As it is, 63 only has two of them.
Hi... Every integer can be expressed as the product of prime numbers (and these primes are it's factors). Since we can multiply any integer by 2 to create a larger integer which can also be expressed as the product of primes, and this number has more prime factors than the last, we can always get a bigger number with more prime factors. Therefore, there is no definable number with the most primes (much like there is no largest number)!
512 = 29 or 768 = 28*3 have 9 prime factors each.
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