1 / 26

Prime Factorization, Greatest Common Factor, & Least Common Multiple

Prime Factorization, Greatest Common Factor, & Least Common Multiple. EDTE 203. Introduction. Determining Prime Factorization Determining the Greatest Common Factor (GCF) Determining the Least Common Multiple (LCM). Introduction.

makya
Télécharger la présentation

Prime Factorization, Greatest Common Factor, & Least Common Multiple

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Prime Factorization,Greatest Common Factor, &Least Common Multiple EDTE 203

  2. Introduction • Determining Prime Factorization • Determining the Greatest Common Factor (GCF) • Determining the Least Common Multiple (LCM)

  3. Introduction • The facts you will learn will give you a variety of information about prime factorization, GCF, and LCM. • This lesson will show you different ways to calculate the prime factors of composite numbers. • This lesson will show you how to use the prime factors to calculate the GCF and LCM of two composite numbers. • You will learn how prime factorization equates to everyday life.

  4. Essential Question The Essentials We Hope To Discover

  5. 2 5 2 3 3 3 5 6 2 10 18 180 The Essential Question • How do prime factorization, greatest common factor, and least common multiple help you to understand the world?

  6. Background Information The Basic facts you need you to know about prime factorization, GCF, and LCM

  7. History of Prime Factorization, Greatest Common Factor, & Least Common Multiple • Originated around 300 B.C. through the “Theorem of (unique) prime factorization” • Started with Euclid’s “Property of Natural Numbers” (e.g., 24= 2∙2∙2∙3)

  8. History of Prime Factorization, Greatest Common Factor, & Least Common Multiple cont. • The Theorem of Prime Factorization was further proven through the work of Gauss and Ernst Eduard Kummer • Prime Factorization is the foundation for finding the Greatest Common Factor and the Least Common Multiple

  9. Solving for Prime Factorization, GCF, and LCM. • There are 2 Ways determine the prime factors • Factor Tree Method • Stacked Method • Determining the GCF and LCM • GCF • LCM

  10. Determining thePrime Factors usingthe Factor Tree Method

  11. Factor Tree Method 96 • × 12 4 × 22 × 6 2 × 22 × 3 2×2×2×2×2×3 =96 • The CORRECT answer: • must be only PRIME numbers • must multiply to give the specified quantity

  12. Factor Tree Method cont. There is more than one way to solve the same problem 96 4 × 24 2 × 26 × 4 2 × 3 2 × 2 96= 2×2×2×2×2×3 96 • × 12 4 × 22 × 6 2 × 22 × 3 96= 2×2×2×2×2×3

  13. Determining the Prime Factors usingThe Stacked Method

  14. The Stacked Method • Begin by dividing the specified quantity by any PRIME number that divides equally, (hint; if it is even try dividing by 2) • Reduce the quotient, dividing again by a PRIME number • Continue reducing the quotient until both the divisor and the quotientare prime numbers. • Re-write the prime numbers as a multiplication problem. (if the final quotient is 1 it doesn’t need included in the answer) • The CORRECT answer: • must be only prime numbers • must multiply to give the specified quantity

  15. Determining the Greatest Common FactorOf Two Composite Numbers

  16. Solving for the Greatest Common Factor Find the prime factorization of the given quantities Determine what factors they have in common. 36 3 × 12 3 × 4 2 × 2 2 × 2 × 3 × 3 = 36 54 6 × 9 3 × 23 × 3 2 × 3 × 3 × 3 =54

  17. Determining the Least Common MultipleOf Two Composite Numbers

  18. Solving for the Least Common Multiple 36 3 × 12 3 × 4 2 × 2 2 × 2 × 3 × 3 = 36 54 6 × 9 2 × 33 × 3 2 × 3 × 3 × 3 =54

  19. Finding the Greatest Common Factor of Two Numbers We are looking for a factor. The factor must be common to both numbers. We need to pick the greatest of such common factors.

  20. The GCF of 36 and 90 Method 1 1) List the factors of each number. 36: 1 2 3 4 6 36 18 24 9 90: 1 2 3 5 6 9 90 45 30 18 15 10 2) Circle the common factors. 3) The greatest of these will be your Greatest Common Factor: 18

  21. The GCF of 36 and 90 Method 2 1) Prime factor each number. 36 = 2 ● 2 ● 3 ●3 90 = 2 ● 3 ● 3 ●5 2) Circle each pair of common prime factors. 3) The product of these common prime factors will be 2 ● 3 ● 3 =18 the Greatest Common Factor:

  22. Finding the Least Common Multiple of Two Numbers We are looking for a multiple. The multiple must be common to both numbers. We need to pick the least of such common multiples.

  23. The LCM of 12 and 15 Method 1 1) List the first few multiples of each number. 12: 12 24 36 48 60 72 84 90 108 120 15: 15 30 45 60 75 90 105 120 135 2) Circle the common multiples. 3) The least of these will be your Least Common Multiple: 60

  24. The LCM of 12 and 15. Method 2 1) Prime factor each number. 12 = 2 ● 2 ● 3 15 = 5 ● 3 2) Circle each pair of common prime factors. 3) Circle each remaining prime factor. 4) Multiply together one factor from each circle to get the 3 ● 2 ● 2 ● 5=60 Least Common Multiple : Note that the common factor, 3, was only used once.

  25. Method 3: Find both GCF and LCM at Once. The GCF and LCM of 72 and 90 1) Make the following table. 9 8 2 10 4 5 2) Divide each number by a common factor. 3) Divide the new numbers by a common factor. Repeat this process until there is no longer a common factor. The product of the factors on the left is the GCF: The product of the factors on the left AND bottom is the LCM: 9 ● 2= 18 9 ● 2● 4● 5 = 360

  26. Journal & Summary • Nine people plan to share equally 24 stamps from one set and 36 stamps from another set. Explain why 9 people cannot share the stamps equally. • What's is the LCM for two numbers that have no common factors greater than 1? Explain your reasoning.

More Related