The smallest example of such a situation is: 3*7*11*13*37=111111
The product is exactly 376 since that is what the prime numbers for 376 are!The product is exactly 376 since that is what the prime numbers for 376 are!The product is exactly 376 since that is what the prime numbers for 376 are!The product is exactly 376 since that is what the prime numbers for 376 are!
Prime factorization is writing a composite number as a product of prime numbers.
It is impossible for the product of two prime numbers to be prime. It is impossible for the sum of two prime numbers to be prime as long as one of the numbers isn't 2.
Both 3 and 5 are prime numbers. 3 x 5 = 15
111111 = 3 * 7 * 11 * 13 * 37
111,111 = 3 x 7 x 11 x 13 x 37
111,111 = 3 x 7 x 11 x 13 x 37. (3,7,11,13,37).
No, none of them.
The smallest example of such a situation is: 3*7*11*13*37=111111
no
No, the product of two prime numbers is unique.
The product is exactly 376 since that is what the prime numbers for 376 are!The product is exactly 376 since that is what the prime numbers for 376 are!The product is exactly 376 since that is what the prime numbers for 376 are!The product is exactly 376 since that is what the prime numbers for 376 are!
The product of two prime numbers will be composite.
A number as a product of prime numbers would be "x".
It is composite.
The LCM of a set of prime numbers is their product.