Asked by Young Lil G

Is it possible for a composite number to have more than one prime factorization? Is it possible for a number to have no prime factors? Why?
Give an example of how prime factorization could be used in the real world.

Answers

Answered by Henry
1. No. After the first prime factorization, no further factoring can be done.

2. Yes. Prime numbers(2, 3, 5, 7) have no prime factors; because they have already gone through "Prime factorization".

Answered by Young Lil G
Thank You
Answered by Steve
Take a look at the Fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic.
thx guys it helpped
Answered by John
I hope y'all do well
Answered by ...... -_-
So I came here to check my answer on this assigment and one of my classmates answer is word from word from Henry's answer and I thought his answer was so good and now im just sitting here like he thought he was getting aways slick .
Answered by saleem
Thanks
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!

Related Questions