6
15
That would be 6.
111
To write 150 million in decimal form, you would place the decimal point after the first digit (1) and add the appropriate number of zeros to represent the millions. Therefore, 150 million in decimal form is 150,000,000.
I love these: T = tens place or first digit. U = ones place, units place, or second digit. 10T+U is the first number T+U=15 = T=15-U 10U+T is the number with the digits switched. 10U+T=10T+U+9 10U+15-U=10(15-U)+U+9 9U+15=150-10U+U+9 9U+15=159-9U 18U=144 U=8 T=15-8 T=7
No.
15
That would be 6.
No factor of 9 has three digits. 450 is a three-digit multiple of 150 (and of 9) with a digit sum of 9.
The two digits that equal 150 are 1 and 5, when combined as the two-digit number 15 multiplied by 10. However, if you're looking for two separate digits that sum to 150, that is not possible since the maximum sum of two single digits (9 + 9) is 18. Therefore, there are no two digits that can equal 150 in a traditional sense.
450 or 900
150
111
150 thousands = 150,000
To write 150 million in decimal form, you would place the decimal point after the first digit (1) and add the appropriate number of zeros to represent the millions. Therefore, 150 million in decimal form is 150,000,000.
150 thousand thousands.
I love these: T = tens place or first digit. U = ones place, units place, or second digit. 10T+U is the first number T+U=15 = T=15-U 10U+T is the number with the digits switched. 10U+T=10T+U+9 10U+15-U=10(15-U)+U+9 9U+15=150-10U+U+9 9U+15=159-9U 18U=144 U=8 T=15-8 T=7