Yellow hypergiant
A yellow hypergiant is a huge hypergiant star. It starts off a mass of about 20–60 solar masses, but it soon loses about half that mass (because they are very unstable). It has a spectral class from A to K.
They are amongst the most luminous stars, with absolute magnitude (MV) around −9. They are very rare: only 15 are known in the Milky Way and six of those are in a single cluster.
They are sometimes referred to as 'cool hypergiants' in comparison to O- and B-type stars, and sometimes as 'warm hypergiants' in comparison to red supergiants. Yellow hypergiants have evolved off the main sequence and have little hydrogen left in their centres.
Examples
Yellow Hypergiant Media
Visual light curve for ρ Cassiopeiae from 1933 to 2015
IRAS 17163-3907 is a yellow hypergiant that clearly shows the expelled material that probably surrounds all yellow hypergiants.
Yellow hypergiant HR 5171 A, seen as the bright yellow star at the center of the image.
Artist's impression of the binary system containing yellow hypergiant HR 5171 A