Recent supernova and transient surveys have revealed an increasing number of
non-terminal stellar eruptions. Though the progenitor class of these eruptions
includes the most luminous stars, little is known of the pre-supernova
mechanics of massive stars in their most evolved state, thus motivating a
census of possible progenitors. From surveys of evolved and unstable luminous
star populations in nearby galaxies, we select a sample of yellow and red
supergiant candidates in M31 and M33 for review of their spectral
characteristics and spectral energy distributions. Since the position of
intermediate and late-type supergiants on the color-magnitude diagram can be
heavily contaminated by foreground dwarfs, we employ spectral classification
and multi-band photometry from optical and near-infrared surveys to confirm
membership. Based on spectroscopic evidence for mass loss and the presence of
circumstellar dust in their SEDs, we find that 30β40% of the yellow
supergiants are likely in a post-red supergiant state. Comparison with
evolutionary tracks shows that these mass-losing, post-RSGs have initial masses
between 20β40Mββ. More than half of the observed red supergiants in
M31 and M33 are producing dusty circumstellar ejecta. We also identify two new
warm hypergiants in M31, J004621.05+421308.06 and J004051.59+403303.00, both of
which are likely in a post-RSG state.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 34 pages, 11 figure