The product of the GCF and the LCM is the same as the product of the original two numbers. Divide the product of the original numbers by the GCF. The result will be the LCM.
In number theory, the product of two positive integers will equal the product of their GCF and LCM. Dividing that product by one of them will give you the other.
The GCF and LCM of 10 and 10 is 10.
The GCF is the factor, the LCM is the other one.
No because their gcf is 8 and their LCM is 48
Only if they're the same number. The LCM and GCF of 10 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.
No, the only way the GCF and LCM of two numbers can be the same is if the numbers are the same.
Yes, if you're comparing a number to itself. The GCF and LCM of 10 and 10 is 10.
Yes, but only if they are the same number.
Yes, if you are comparing the number to itself.
They can be, but only if you're comparing the number to itself. The GCF and LCM of 10 and 10 is 10.
The product of the GCF and the LCM is the same as the product of the original two numbers. Divide the product of the original numbers by the GCF. The result will be the LCM.
The LCM of a set of numbers will never be less than the GCF.
The LCM of a set of numbers will never be less than the GCF.
In number theory, the product of two positive integers will equal the product of their GCF and LCM. Dividing that product by one of them will give you the other.
The product of the original numbers is equal to the product of the GCF and LCM. Divide the product of the LCM and GCF by the one number. The answer will be the other.