frankslatery wrote:
Wording seems ambiguous here.
Clearly A has more unique prime factors (2 versus 1), but the stem asks about PRIME factors and does not specify unique or distinct.
Quanity A- includes \(2^{2}\) and \(3^{1}\) so there are 3 instance of prime factors as the stem asks for
Quantity B- is\( 2^{6}\) and includes 6 instances of prime factors.64 has 6 prime factors (2*2*2*2*2*2) and 1 unique prime factor(2)
Would it not be reasonable to conclude B based on how this question is worded in not specifying unique prime factors?
The concept of distinct/non distinct rarely comes into play and if it does, it does only when we are talking about prime factors.
12 = 2^2 * 3
Some may say that 12 has 3 prime factors: 2, 2 and 3
But usually when the question asks for number of prime factors, it means
the number of distinct prime factors. Just for clarity, the question may mention "what are the number of distinct prime factors of 12?"
So in the case above about 2^6 we still have ONE prime. The two.
Hope this helps