Math, asked by veenasaran10, 10 days ago

The correct way to write prime factorisation ​

Answers

Answered by yokavya0008
0

Answer:

1) Put a prime factor on the outside left, and the result or quotient (the number of times it divides evenly) underneath.

2) Divide the quotient (the number underneath) by another prime number, and keep doing this until the bottom number is a prime.

Then you can stop. The order you do this in doesn’t matter. You get the same result or list of prime factors no matter what order you use.

Example: Determine the prime factorization of 120.

3) Use the numbers from the left to write out the prime factorization.

Look at the numbers going down the left side of the work and the number at the bottom. They act the same as the divisors in a division problem, but in this case, they’re all prime numbers. Although many composite numbers could have played the role of divisor for the number 120, the numbers for the prime factorization of 120 must be prime-number divisors.

When using this process, you usually do all the 2s first, then all the 3s, then all the 5s, and so on to make the prime factorization process easier, but you can do this in any order:

120 = 2 x 2 x 2 x 3 x 5  = 2^3 x 3 x 5

Answered by nykr811
0
This is the correct method of prime factorisation.
Always start with smallest prime numbers
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