Pasteur's Experiment

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Louis Pasteur designed a procedure to test whether sterile nutrient broth could spontaneously generate microbial life. To do this, he set up two experiments. In both, Pasteur added nutrient broth to flasks, bent the necks of the flasks into S shapes, and then boiled the broth to kill any existing microbes.

After the broth had been sterilized, Pasteur broke off the swan necks from the flasks in Experiment 1, exposing the nutrient broth within them to air from above. The flasks in Experiment 2 were left alone.

Over time, dust particles from the air fell into the broken flasks of Experiment 1. In Experiment 2, dust particles remained near the tip of the swan necks, but could not travel against gravity into the flasks.

The broth in the broken flasks quickly became cloudy—a sign that it teemed with microbial life. However, the broth in the unbroken flasks remained clear. Without the introduction of dust—on which microbes can travel—no life arose. Pasteur thus refuted the notion of spontaneous generation.
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Nice presentation! Simple and direct to point

christine
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Thanks for your nice video.
I'm editting a video about Louis Pasteur and this his experiment.
Can I use your video in my project?
Thanks in advance.

jerrypotter
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Thanks for information now I can do research

taha
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But what if you left the flasks there for 5 billion years then what would happen?

codychristopher
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I love you more than Louis pasteur love his swan neck tube

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