The pair of numbers whose GCF is 1 and LCM is 36 is 9 and 4. The numbers should be greater than their GCF and less than their LCM.
3 and 36 9 and 12
4 & 9
9 and 12
no because the GFC has to be equal to or less than the lowest number
9
3 and 36 9 and 12
4 & 9
You would have to be a pair of numbers. 6 and 36 would work, as would 12 and 18.
There is not a unique answer. (3,36) and (9,12) are two possible solutions.
9 and 12
Well, honey, if the LCM is 36 and the GCF is 3, then the pair of numbers we're looking for is 12 and 36. Why? Because 12 and 36 have a GCF of 12 (which is 3) and an LCM of 36. So there you have it, darling, a match made in math heaven.
The pair of numbers whose GCF is 1 and LCM is 36 is 9 and 4. The numbers should be greater than their GCF and less than their LCM.
The LCM is never less than the greatest number in the set. The LCM of 4 and 9 is 36.
No. A multiple cannot be less than the number it is compared to. An LCM can never be less than the greatest number in the set.
35 and 36 are coprime (any pair of consecutive numbers must be). So lcm(35, 36) = 35*36 = 1260.
36 and 72 8 and 9
3 and 36 9 and 12