Tash,
In reference to colour shifting you can talk about how planet hunters use this when searching for planets. They observe a distant star and watch to see if the light from the star is shifted over time due to an orbiting planet exerting a gravitational tug.
“To detect the planets, the astronomers looked for a wobble in their parent star's motion, detectable as a shift in the star's spectra. A tell-tale oscillation in the frequency of certain bright lines in the star's spectra reveals the presence of an unseen companion. “
Paul Butler and Geoff Marcy are the worlds leading discoverers with this method.
https://planetquest.jpl.nasa.gov/science/finding_planets.cfmNB: Some astronomers dispute the validity of some discoveries made this way.
Also, astronomers use non-visible colour, or colour that is beyond the frequencies our eyes can detect such as Ultra-violet and Infrared.
https://coolcosmos.ipac.caltech.edu/cosmic_classroom/ir_tutorial/importance.htmlIn regard to what timothy said about primary colours. Because light is an additive mixing process the primary colours are different to those used in painting which is a subtractive (I think) mixing process. The primary colours in light are RED, GREEN, BLUE. If you look closely at your TV screen you will see thousands of RED,GREEN,BLUE dots. Each group of three form a Pixel (picture element) and produce different colours depending on the amount of illumination. The eye is extremely sensitive to Green and less sensitive to Blue, so to produce white they are mixed in the following ratios known as the Trichromatic ratio.
1T lumen White = 0.59T Green + 0.3T Red + 0.11T Blue