and
post-AGB track across the yellow supergiant region Supergiants are stars that have evolved away from the main sequence after exhausting the hydrogen in their cores. Yellow supergiants are a
heterogenous group of stars crossing the standard categories of stars in the HR diagram at various different stages of their evolution. Stars more massive than spend a few million years on the main sequence as class O and early B stars until the dense hydrogen in their cores becomes depleted. Then they expand and cool to become supergiants. They spend a few thousand years as a yellow supergiant while cooling, then spend one to four million years as a red supergiant, typically. Supergiants make up less than 1% of stars; though different proportions in the visible early eras of the universe. The relatively brief phases and concentration of matter explains the rarity of these stars. Some red supergiants undergo a
blue loop, temporarily re-heating and becoming yellow or even
blue supergiants before cooling again. Stellar models show that blue loops rely on particular chemical makeups and other assumptions, but they are most likely for stars of low red supergiant mass. While cooling for the first time or when performing a sufficiently extended blue loop, yellow supergiants will cross the instability strip and pulsate as
Classical Cepheid variables with periods around ten days and longer. Intermediate mass stars leave the main sequence by cooling along the
subgiant branch until they reach the
red-giant branch. Stars more massive than about have a sufficiently large helium core that it begins fusion before becoming degenerate. These stars will perform a blue loop. For masses between about and , the blue loop can extend to F and G spectral types at luminosities reaching . These stars may develop supergiant luminosity classes, especially if they are pulsating. When these stars cross the instability strip they will pulsate as short period Cepheids. Blue loops in these stars can last for around 10 million years, so this type of yellow supergiant is more common than the more luminous types. Stars with masses similar to the sun develop degenerate helium cores after they leave the main sequence and ascend to the tip of the red-giant branch where they ignite
helium in a flash. They then fuse core helium on the
horizontal branch with luminosities too low to be considered supergiants. Stars leaving the blue half of the horizontal branch to be classified in the
asymptotic giant branch (AGB) pass through the yellow classifications and will pulsate as
BL Herculis variables. Such yellow stars may be given a
supergiant luminosity class despite their low masses but assisted by luminous pulsation. In the AGB thermal pulses from the helium-fusing shell of stars may cause a blue loop across the instability strip. Such stars will pulsate as
W Virginis variables and again may be classified as relatively low luminosity yellow supergiants. The evolutionary status of yellow supergiant
R Coronae Borealis variables is unclear. They may be post-AGB stars reignited by a late helium shell flash, or they could be formed from white dwarf
mergers. It is expected that first-time yellow supergiants mature to the red supergiant stage without any supernova. The cores of some post-red supergiant yellow supergiants might collapse and trigger a supernova. A handful of supernovae have been associated with apparent yellow supergiant progenitors that are not luminous enough to be post-red supergiants. If these are confirmed then an explanation must be found for how a star of moderate mass still with a helium core would cause a core-collapse supernova. The obvious candidate in such cases is always some form of binary interaction. Based on reports from Chinese astronomers in the 2nd/1st century BC, the red supergiant
Betelgeuse was described as yellow, hinting it may have been a yellow supergiant at the time. ==Yellow hypergiants==