Abstract
Ground-based observations from 0.6 to 20 microns have identified two luminous, evolved stars surrounded by thick dust shells among the Magellanic Cloud sources detected by the Infrared Astronomical Satellite. Their energy distributions resemble those of typical Galactic OH/IR stars, but they have bolometric magnitudes brighter than -9 and the small-amplitude variability of supergiants. One star, IRAS 04553 - 6825, has a special type of M7.5 and a dust shell which absorbs and reradiates roughly 75 percent of the star's luminosity; its radial velocity confirms its LMC membership. The second star, IRAS 05346 - 6949, has an even thicker dust shell, and the central star is not observable.
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