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 scientific notation.

To get the total storage capacity of the phone after buying the additional bytes, we need to add the additional bytes to the initial storage capacity.

The additional bytes can be represented in scientific notation as 3.84 x 10^11 (since 384,000,000,000 can be written as 3.84 x 10^11 in scientific notation).

So, the total storage capacity of the phone after buying the additional bytes would be:
1.28 x 10^11 + 3.84 x 10^11 = (1.28 + 3.84) x 10^11 = 5.12 x 10^11 bytes.

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

To determine the total storage of the phone after purchasing the additional bytes, we need to add the two storage capacities together.

The initial storage capacity is 1.28×10^11 bytes.

The additional storage capacity is 384,000,000,000 bytes.

Adding these two figures together yields:

1.28×10^11 + 384,000,000,000 = 3.84×10^11 bytes

Therefore, the storage capacity of the phone after purchasing the additional bytes would be 3.84×10^11 bytes in scientific notation.

To find out how much storage the phone would have if you buy the additional bytes, we can add the original storage capacity to the additional storage capacity.

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

To add these two values, we need to ensure that they have the same exponent (power of 10). Since the original storage capacity is already in scientific notation, we can rewrite the additional storage capacity in scientific notation as well.

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

Now, we can add the two values:

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 a storage capacity of 5.12×10^11 bytes.