Prime numbers are like the special members of a group, they only have two friends: one and themselves. In a multiplication table, you can find them hiding when no other numbers can make them by multiplying. Imagine a grid where rows and columns multiply to fill in each box; primes stay hidden because no other pair of numbers makes them.
Examples
- A multiplication table has the number 4 (2 × 2), but there’s no way to make the prime number 3 except by multiplying 1 and 3.
- The number 9 appears many times in the multiplication table, like 3 × 3 or 9 × 1, but primes such as 5 can’t be divided evenly by any other numbers.
- Prime number 7 is only found once in the grid because it’s not divisible by 2, 3, 4, or 6.
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See also
- Why Do Prime Numbers Appear So Randomly?
- How Does The Pattern Behind Prime Numbers Finally Explained Work?
- What Is the Golden Rectangle?
- What are fibonacci numbers?
- Why Are Some Numbers 'Fancy' and Others Just Ordinary?