i would say no
Square numbers can't be prime. They have too many factors.
No, there are no prime numbers that are also square numbers. Prime numbers are only divisible by 1 and themselves, while square numbers have integer square roots. Since the square root of a prime number is not an integer, a prime number cannot be a square number.
There are no prime numbers that are square numbers
No, square numbers greater than 1 have more than two factors.
I might be reading this incorrectly, but it seems to me that I can take two prime numbers, 3 and 3, and make the square number nine out of them. This is also true of all the other prime numbers.
Prime numbers only have two factors; square numbers (other than 1) have more than two.
Prime numbers have two factors, composite numbers have more than two.
4
No other prime numbers are consecutive because there aren't any other even prime numbers.
Any two prime numbers will be relatively prime. Numbers are relatively prime if they do not have any prime factors in common. Prime numbers have only themselves as prime factors, so all prime numbers are relatively prime to the others.
Any two prime numbers, eg 3 and 17 also any two co-prime numbers eg 26 and 33
Any prime square like, 4, 9, 25 and 49.