For example, 3 + 61, or 5 + 59. There may be other solutions; I didn't check.
There are not two prime numbers whose product is 64. The prime factorization of 64 is 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 2, which is 2 to the 6th power. These are the only prime numbers that can be multiplied together to result in 64. There are six of them, not two. The only pair of numbers whose product is 64 that includes one prime number is 2 x 32, but only one number is prime.
64
64
82
The LCM is 5184. The numbers 81 and 64 have no common factors. When you have two relatively prime numbers, you find their LCM by multiplying them. So 5184 is 81x64.
The sum of the prime numbers 11 and 53 equals 64.
The prime factorization of 64 is 2x2x2x2x2x2 or 26. 2 is the only prime number in the factorization of 64.
64 itself is a square. There are no other two squares that add up to 64.
There are not two prime numbers whose product is 64. The prime factorization of 64 is 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 2, which is 2 to the 6th power. These are the only prime numbers that can be multiplied together to result in 64. There are six of them, not two. The only pair of numbers whose product is 64 that includes one prime number is 2 x 32, but only one number is prime.
64
That's a false statement. Both 16 and 64 have one prime factor. 16 can't be the LCM of two prime numbers and 64 can't be the product. If you leave out the word prime, you can use 16 and 4.
As a product of its prime factors: 2*2*2*2*2*2 = 64 or as 26 = 64
61 and 3
36 and 64
45 and 64 are not prime numbers because they both have more than two factors
They both are not prime numbers
The only prime factor of 64 is 2.