The factor pairs of 51 are (1,51) and (17,3)
The difference is between factor pairs and distinct factors. With square numbers, one of the factor pairs will be the same number twice. When listing the distinct factors, that number is only listed once.
The factor pairs of 98 are (1,98), (2,49), and (7,14).
One pair: it's a prime number.
No. Factor pairs can be combined to create multiples.
The factor pairs of 50 are (1, 50), (2, 25), and (5, 10). These pairs are formed by finding two numbers that multiply together to give 50. The factors of 50 are all the numbers that can evenly divide into 50 without leaving a remainder.
80 has 5 factor pairs.
80 has 5 factor pairs.
The factor pairs of 50 are pairs of numbers that can be multiplied together to equal 50. The factor pairs of 50 are (1, 50), (2, 25), and (5, 10). These pairs are derived from finding all the possible combinations of two numbers that multiply to 50.
1x50 2x25 5x10
(50,1)(25,2)(10,5)
factor pair = 50,1factor pair = 25,2factor pair = 10,5
The factor pairs of 150 are 1*150, 2*75, 3*50, 5*30, 6*25, and 10*15
The factor pairs of 250 are: 1 x 250 2 x 125 5 x 50 10 x 25
1 and 500, 2 and 250, 4 and 125, 5 and 100, 10 and 50, 20 and 25, a total of 6 factor pairs.
Yes. Factor pairs are always repeated across pairs since factor pairs are certain kinds of pairs.
the factor pairs are 1x35 & 5x7