It's when you combine virtually identical multiple exposures, "stacking" 
them to reach a final image that has a total exposure time equal to the sum 
of the individual exposures.

It's useful in astrophotography for a number of reaons.  The main one is 
that a bunch of short, say 6 individual 30 second exposures, can be combined 
The result is the accumulated photons of a 3 minute exposure.  The neat 
thing is that tracking error (irregularities in the motor drive or polar 
alignment) can be virtually eliminated, because software automatically 
aligns/registers the individual images so they overlay each other perfectly.

The additional benefit we're talking about here is that the sensor can be 
run at both a lower ISO and for a shorter exposure duration, both of which 
reduce noise.

Tom C.




>From: "Shel Belinkoff" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List <[email protected]>
>To: "Pentax-Discuss Mail List" <[email protected]>
>Subject: Re: K10D aimed as D200 killer/Translation of interview
>Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2006 15:38:30 -0800
>
>What's a "stacked image?"
>
>Shel
>
>
>
> > [Original Message]
> > From: Tom C
>
> > It also is likely possible to reduce
> > overall noise by shooting at shorter
> > exposure times and stacking images.
> > The stack will stack up noise just like
> > it does with the signal, but if each
> > stacked image is  less than half as
> > noisy as it's double-ISO cousin,
> > results could be favorable.
>
>
>
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