Prime numbers have exactly two numbers. There is theoretically an infinite number of them.
Each prime number has only two factors which are itself and one.
Divide it by each prime number which does not have remainder.
Prime squares have three factors. There are 11 of them in that range.
If you mean 5 different prime factors, there are none. Multiplying the first five primes, you get 2*3*5*7*11 = 2310. If there is no requirement that the prime factors be different, there are many such numbers, the smallest being 2*2*2*2*2 = 32, and the largest being 2*2*2*5*7 = 280.
A prime number is a positive integer that has exactly two factors - 1 and itself. A prime number has only two factors which are itself and one.
Prime numbers have exactly two numbers. There is theoretically an infinite number of them.
There are infinitely many such numbers. For example, take any prime number to the 11th power and the result will have exactly twelve factors.
Each prime number has only two factors which are itself and one.
Prime numbers have as factors the number 1 and their own number. Example: 37 is a prime number because its only factors are "1" and "37". If the prime number had further factors, it would no longer be prime.
Every prime number has exactly 2 factors, 1 and the number itself.
The smallest is 192 but there are infinitely many such numbers. For example, take any prime number to the 13th power and the result will have exactly fourteen factors. The smallest is 192.
30 has three prime factors. The prime factors are 2,3,5.
If they are prime numbers only 2 factors but if they are composite number they will have more than 2 factors
Prime numbers have two factors.
Two prime factors
Two prime factors.