According to its definition, Synergetics is concerned with systems that produce macroscopic spatial, temporal, or functional structures. Autowaves are*a specific, yet very important, case of spatio-temporal structures. The term "e;autowave"e; was coined in the Soviet Union in analogy to the term "e;auto-oscillator"e;. This is - perhaps too literal - translation of the Russian word "e;avto-ostsillyatory"e; (= self- oscillator) which in its proper translation means "e;self-sustained oscillator"e;. These are oscillators, e. g. , clocks, whose internal energy dissipation is compensa- ted by a (more or less) continuous power input. Simi larly, the term "e;autowaves"e; de- notes propagation effects - including waves - in active media, which provide spa- tially distributed energy sources and thus may compensate dissipation. An example which is now famous is represented by spiral or concentric waves in a chemically active medium, undergoing the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction. This book provides the reader with numerous further examples from physics, chem- istry, and biology - e. g. , autowaves of the heart. While the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction is now widely known, a number of very important results obtained in the Soviet Union are perhaps less well known. I am particularly glad that this book may help to make readers outside the Soviet Union acquainted with these important exper- imental and theoretical findings which are presented in a way which elucidates the common principles underlying this kind of propagation effects. Professor V.