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27 April, 20:31

Can u always find the LCM for two numbers by multiplying them together? Why or why not

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  1. 27 April, 20:53
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    When you multiply the two numbers together, you will always find a common multiple, but necessarily the lowest.

    Consider 2 and 5. The LCM is 10! Easy enough.

    What about 6 and 15? Well, 6 times 15 is 90 ... but the LCM is 30.

    The LCM can be found by taking the prime factors of the numbers multiplied together without duplicates.

    In that case, 6 = 2*3 and 15 = 3*5. The LCM is 2*3*5 = 30.

    Whenever the numbers share a prime factor, just multiplying them together isn't going to give you the LCM because you haven't gotten rid of the duplicates.

    (Notice how 90 is 3 times 30)
  2. 27 April, 22:55
    0
    Multiplying two numbers together will not always give you their lowest common multiple. For example, the least common multiple of 2 and 4 is 4. However, most of the time the LCM will be the product of the two numbers.
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