A mobile phone holds 1.28×10^11 bytes of storage. You can also pay more money to get an additional 384,000,000,000 bytes. How much storage would your phone have if you buy the additional bytes? The answer should be in scientific notation.

To find the total storage after buying the additional bytes, you need to add the original storage capacity to the additional bytes purchased.

Original storage capacity: 1.28 × 10^11 bytes
Additional bytes purchased: 384,000,000,000 bytes

Total storage = Original storage capacity + Additional bytes purchased
= 1.28 × 10^11 bytes + 384,000,000,000 bytes

To add these numbers together, first rewrite 384,000,000,000 in scientific notation:
384,000,000,000 = 3.84 × 10^11

Now, add the numbers:
1.28 × 10^11 bytes + 3.84 × 10^11 bytes = (1.28 + 3.84) × 10^11 bytes = 5.12 × 10^11 bytes

Therefore, your phone would have a storage capacity of 5.12 × 10^11 bytes if you buy the additional bytes.

To find the total storage capacity of the phone after buying the additional bytes, you need to add the two values together.

1 byte = 1
384,000,000,000 bytes = 3.84 × 10^11

So, the total storage capacity would be:

1.28 × 10^11 bytes + 3.84 × 10^11 bytes = (1.28 + 3.84) × 10^11 bytes
= 5.12 × 10^11 bytes

Therefore, the phone would have 5.12 × 10^11 bytes of storage after buying the additional bytes.

To find out how much storage your phone would have if you buy the additional bytes, you need to add the original storage capacity (1.28×10^11 bytes) to the additional storage capacity (384,000,000,000 bytes).

Step 1: Convert the additional storage capacity from bytes to scientific notation.
384,000,000,000 bytes = 3.84×10^11 bytes

Step 2: Add the original storage capacity to the additional storage capacity.
1.28×10^11 bytes + 3.84×10^11 bytes = 5.12×10^11 bytes

Therefore, if you buy the additional bytes, your phone would have 5.12×10^11 bytes of storage.