Originally Posted by
DanK
Some people reading your post might not understand the difference between random (shot and read) noise and fixed pixel noise because one doesn't often encounter the latter in daytime photography. But in night photography, it's important to distinguish between them.
When people talk about noise without qualification, they almost always mean random noise. Random noise becomes more apparent at high ISOs because noise is amplified along with signal. However, it does not become more apparent with long exposures. Long exposures may generate fixed pixel noise--certain pixels that discharge inappropriately after a long time. For that reason, night photographers often use what is sometimes called long-exposure noise reduction or black-frame noise reduction: the camera takes a black frame of equal length, and since the aberrant pixels are fixed, the camera simply subtracts those pixels in from the first image.