Very briefly. Others can say more. If you take images through red, green, and blue filters, you end up with gray-scale images for each of those that can be calibrated and stacked separately into R, G, B integrated images. Using a color-combining procedure, those 3 images can be combined to create an "RGB color image." And that is all you really need, But, if you also took images with images through no color filter at all, that would be an L image (also gray-scale). The procedure LRGB Combine could augment the RGB image with the L image. (This is done once the images are nonlinear.) Again, this is all you would need for your image, but if you also took images through an hydrogen-alpha filter, then, using the script NBRGB, you could combine it with the RGB--really with the red component. This is best done before going nonlinear and before introducing the L into the mix.
This assumes your are using a mono camera, not a one-shot color (OSC) or DSLR camera. They produce the RGB simultaneously, but you can still add the Ha, however, there's really little point (as far as I know) of forcing such a camera to take L images, which are optional even in the situation described above. L images have often been used to bolster exposure detail and cut down on the total exposure time by taking fewer R,B,G images.
Alex