Method 1. The prime factorization:
The prime factorization of a number: finding the prime numbers that multiply together to make that number.
600 = 23 × 3 × 52
600 is not a prime number but a composite one.
1,000 = 23 × 53
1,000 is not a prime number but a composite one.
* The natural numbers that are only divisible by 1 and themselves are called prime numbers. A prime number has exactly two factors: 1 and itself.
* A composite number is a natural number that has at least one other factor than 1 and itself.
Calculate the least common multiple, lcm:
Multiply all the prime factors of the two numbers, taken by the largest exponents (largest powers).
lcm (600; 1,000) = 23 × 3 × 53
lcm (600; 1,000) = 23 × 3 × 53 = 3,000
The two numbers have common prime factors
Method 2. The Euclidean Algorithm:
Calculate the greatest (highest) common factor (divisor):
This algorithm involves the process of dividing numbers and calculating the remainders.
'a' and 'b' are the two natural numbers, 'a' >= 'b'.
Divide 'a' by 'b' and get the remainder of the operation, 'r'.
If 'r' = 0, STOP. 'b' = the gcf (hcf, gcd) of 'a' and 'b'.
Else: Replace ('a' by 'b') and ('b' by 'r'). Return to the step above.
Step 1. Divide the larger number by the smaller one:
1,000 ÷ 600 = 1 + 400
Step 2. Divide the smaller number by the above operation's remainder:
600 ÷ 400 = 1 + 200
Step 3. Divide the remainder of the step 1 by the remainder of the step 2:
400 ÷ 200 = 2 + 0
At this step, the remainder is zero, so we stop:
200 is the number we were looking for - the last non-zero remainder.
This is the greatest (highest) common factor (divisor).
The greatest (highest) common factor (divisor):
gcf, hcf, gcd (600; 1,000) = 200
Calculate the least common multiple:
The least common multiple, Formula:
lcm (a; b) = (a × b) / gcf, hcf, gcd (a; b)
lcm (600; 1,000) =
(600 × 1,000) / gcf, hcf, gcd (600; 1,000) =
600,000 / 200 =
3,000
lcm (600; 1,000) = 3,000 = 23 × 3 × 53
The final answer:
The least common multiple
lcm (600; 1,000) = 3,000 = 23 × 3 × 53
The two numbers have common prime factors.
Why is it useful to calculate the least common multiple?
When adding, subtracting or sorting fractions with different denominators, in order to work with those fractions we must first make the denominators the same. An easy way is to calculate the least common multiple of all the denominators of the fractions (the least common denominator).
By definition, the least common multiple of two numbers is the smallest natural number that is: (1) greater than 0 and (2) a multiple of both numbers.