Simone,
Thank you for the ref to the stacking software.
You obviously worked with a less than clean sky!
Jan Anne: I see several advantages for stacking vs one single long exposure frame.
1. Stacking allows you to work at higher ISO without the risk of over exposing parts of the picture. especially the sky itself will remain as dark as in one single short exposure.
2. Especially you can try star trails in the city, with quite luminous foregrounds. See the attached picture (many 20 second exposures) and imagine what it would be with a single 45min exposure)
3. in case something goes wrong during the process of acquiring the shots (unwanted plane, someone pointing a flashlight directly to the camera...), you can always eliminate the specific frame and keep the rest.
The nice thing is that the stacking is done in "lighten" mode, so only the brightest part of each shot are kept.
I agree that long exposures allow for better visibility of the foreground in dark areas. But with stacking, you always have the possibility to add a longer exposure to the mix, possibly with a higher ISO setting.
example taken near Paris, inside the city of Auvers sur Oise (where Jan Anne's fellow citizen Van Gogh lived his last days). This was another technical trial, stopped prematurely because of the arrival of an excessive amount of clouds.