If your number N is equal to N = w*x*y*z, then you could also write it as N = a*y*z, where a = w*x.
If the GCF of a given pair of numbers is 1, the LCM will be equal to their product. If the GCF is greater than 1, the LCM will be less than their product. Or, stated another way, if the two numbers have no common prime factors, their LCM will be their product.
give an example of two fractions whose product equals 1
When they are co-prime. That is, when they do not have a common factor (other than 1).
62 has two prime factors: 2 and 31. It doesn't matter where you write them on the page.
The LCM is their product. The LCM of 27 and 35 is 945.
As a product of its prime factors it is: 3*5 = 15 Or as: 1*15 = 15
Is sometimes possible, but not always.
a-n = 1/an = (1/a) x .... x (1/a), this last product having n factors, each is 1/a
Two numbers are factors of a product when they multiply with each other to become the product. For example, if the product number is 10, then our factors can be 2 and 5, or 1 and 10.
1 and 23
1 and 2
The factors are greater than the product.
1 and 49 7 and 7
1 and 9.
Their product.
The factors of 169 are 1, 13, and 169, and the prime factors are 13 x 13. 169 is the product of 1 x 169 or of the prime factors 13 x 13.
If the question is in the context of integers and prime factorisation, then it is the number 1. If the question is about the product of two real numbers, the answer is when both factors are between 0 and 1, or when one of the factors is greater than 1 and the other is negative.