Math, asked by Angelinababe, 10 months ago

Fundamental theorem of Arithmetic​

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Answered by sumitgolu2003
1

Answer:

The fundamental theorem of arithmetic states that every positive integer (except the number 1) can be represented in exactly one way apart from rearrangement as a product of one or more primes (Hardy and Wright 1979, pp. 2-3). This theorem is also called the unique factorization theorem.

Answered by pp7136882
1

Answer:

if one number divids the square of outher number that number can divide that number

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