Prime power
Adapted from Wikipedia ยท Discoverer experience
In mathematics, a prime power is a special kind of positive integer. It is a number that can be written as a power of just one prime number. For example, 7 is a prime power because it equals 71, and 9 is a prime power because it equals 32. Numbers like 6, which is 2 ร 3, are not prime powers because they use more than one prime number.
Prime powers are important in many areas of math. They help us understand how numbers break apart into smaller pieces, a idea called divisible by exactly one prime number. The number 1 is special because it is not considered a prime power.
The list of prime powers starts with small numbers like 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7, and continues with bigger numbers such as 8, 9, 11, and so on. These numbers appear in patterns that mathematicians study to learn more about how numbers work together.
Properties
Prime powers are numbers you get when you multiply a prime number by itself a certain number of times. For example, 8 is a prime power because it is 2 ร 2 ร 2.
Some special things happen with prime powers in math. For example, most prime powers have a special pattern that helps solve certain kinds of problems. Also, the number of different ways you can divide a prime power evenly follows simple rules. All prime powers are numbers that are smaller than the sum of their divisors, which is an interesting pattern mathematicians study.
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Prime power, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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