Preface

The CD you have just inserted in your computer is the result of my desire to share with you a number of wonderful visual experiences that nature can reveal to a sensitive viewer. A total solar eclipse made a deep impression on me because within a couple of minutes it enabled me to see and understand a multitude of very interesting phenomena. Throughout my life I have been convinced that there is no greater adventure than the adventure of discovery. Each thriller or sci-fi film is poor nothing when compared to adventure of discovering the fascinating laws, phenomena and beauty of nature. The beauty of these adventures lies in the fact that they can take place anywhere, even at home in the kitchen over some notes jotted down with a pencil on a crumpled scrap of paper. My relation to science is that of a pure romantic. My idea of a scientist is that of a man obsessed with the desire for discovery who, although weak from hunger, wades knee-deep in mud searching for an imprint of an ancient species of horsetail, or who falls asleep through exhaustion at four o'clock in the morning in his lab, down in the cellar, leaning against his beloved experimental apparatus which is permanently on the verge of exploding, or he is a man absent-mindedly walking up and down the room ignoring other people's questions or remarks as he digs deep into the axioms of multi-value logic. A scientist is a man who will spend his last money for a box of CDs with 20 gigabytes of cosmic noise because with a probability of 10-7 they contain a record of an impulse of Z-rays which is the last missing link of his all-explaining general theory, understandable only to himself and, even then, only for a maximum of 20 minutes a day. The greatest reward for a scientist is neither money nor fame, but discovery. As I am first and foremost a teacher who is in love with his job I would like this desire for discovery to rub off onto my students. Maybe this will not put them on the well-trodden road to affluence and comfort, but I am absolutely positive about one thing. The discovery itself is more important than the result of it. Those who do walk down the road of discovery know why they have been out on this planet. We are here to discover and understand.

Acknowledgements

Before the CD could see the light of day a lot of effort had to be put into it. Without huge amounts of understanding and assistance from all my family I would never have been able to finish my work on the CD.

Miloslav Druckmⁿller
Brno - Komφn, April 2000