There is really no such thing as a "greatest common multiple". Once you find the least common multiple of a set of numbers, you can keep adding the LCM to itself over and over again. Each new number you get will be a common multiple of your set of numbers, but each new number will always be larger than the previous. This means that you can keep adding while the number approaches infinity and you will still never find a greatest multiple.
The Greatest Common Multiple of 7 and 11 is 1.
The greatest common multiple of any set of integers is infinite.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Did you perhaps mean:the greatest common FACTOR (the greatest number which divides into 14 and 21 without remainder): gcf(14, 21) = 7;the LOWEST common multiple (the smallest number which is a positive multiple of both 14 and 21): lcm(14, 21) = 42
The least common multiple of two numbers is their product divided by their greatest common factor. Since 7 is a prime number and 27 is not a multiple of 7, their greatest common factor is 1. The least common multiple is 7 x 27 ÷ 1 = 189.
The greatest common multiple of 7 and 15, like any two numbers, is infinite.The lowest common multiple, the smallest number into which both 7 and 15 divide, is 105The greatest common factor, the largest number which divides both 7 and 15, is 1.
The Least Common Multiple of 29, 7 is 203.
Greatest common factor (GCF) =7 Least common multiple (LCM) =693
6
There is no answer.
The LCM for 24 and 7 is 168
The least common multiple of 7 and 9 is 63. The GCF of 7 and 9 is 1.
The least common multiple of two numbers is the product of the two numbers divided by their greatest common factor. The greatest common factor of 7 and 159 is 1, so the least common multiple is 7 x 159 ÷ 1 = 1113.
Don't you mean least common multiple? The least common multiple is 210.