There must be at least 2 numbers before a LCM can be determined. However, in your question, you only mentioned one number. Thus, it is impossible to find a LCM.
The LCM of 60 and 102 is 1020.
The LCM of 3 & 17 is... 51.
Gcf(10, 20, 25) = 5 lcm(10, 20, 25) = 100
That would be 612. 68 is not divisible by 9 until it reaches 68x9, which is 612, so that makes it the LCM.
The GCF is 60.
The LCM is 1020.
The LCM is 185640.
1020
The LCM of 12, 17, 15 is 1020.
Oh, dude, the LCM of 1020 and 6 is 1020. Like, you take the highest power of each prime number that appears in the factorization of both numbers, and then multiply them together. It's like finding the common ground between these two numbers, but in a mathy way.
The Least Common Multiple (LCM) of 27 and 1,020 is 9,180.
The LCM of both numbers is 7140 and the GCF is 5
The LCM of 60 and 102 is 1020.
The LCM of 3 & 17 is... 51.
Gcf(10, 20, 25) = 5 lcm(10, 20, 25) = 100
That would be 612. 68 is not divisible by 9 until it reaches 68x9, which is 612, so that makes it the LCM.
3% of 1020 = 3% * 1020 = 0.03 * 1020 = 30.6