Monitoring luminous yellow massive stars in M33: new yellow hypergiant candidates
M. Kourniotis, A.Z. Bonanos, W. Yuan, L.M. Macri, D. Garcia-Alvarez,, C.-H. Lee

TL;DR
This study identifies new yellow hypergiant candidates in M33 by combining optical spectroscopy, photometry, and infrared data, advancing understanding of massive star evolution near the supernova stage.
Contribution
It introduces a robust multi-wavelength approach to detect and analyze yellow hypergiants, increasing the known candidates and insights into their atmospheric and circumstellar properties.
Findings
Three luminous YSGs are YHG candidates with hot dust and extended envelopes.
Spectroscopy reveals extended atmospheres and variability similar to Galactic YHG $ ho$ Cas.
Mid-IR photometry combined with optical data effectively identifies YHG candidates.
Abstract
The evolution of massive stars surviving the red supergiant (RSG) stage remains unexplored due to the rarity of such objects. The yellow hypergiants (YHGs) appear to be the warm counterparts of post-RSG classes located near the Humphreys-Davidson upper luminosity limit, which are characterized by atmospheric instability and high mass-loss rates. We aim to increase the number of YHGs in M33 and thus to contribute to a better understanding of the pre-supernova evolution of massive stars. Optical spectroscopy of five dust-enshrouded YSGs selected from mid-IR criteria was obtained with the goal of detecting evidence of extensive atmospheres. We also analyzed BVI photometry for 21 of the most luminous YSGs in M33 to identify changes in the spectral type. To explore the properties of circumstellar dust, we performed SED-fitting of multi-band photometry of the 21 YSGs. We find three luminous…
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