Large-scale bars and minor mergers are important drivers for the secular
evolution of galaxies. Based on ground-based optical images and spectra as well
as ultraviolet data from the Galaxy Evolution Explorer and infrared data from
the Spitzer Space Telescope, we present a multi-wavelength study of star
formation properties in the barred galaxy NGC 7479, which also has obvious
features of a minor merger. Using various tracers of star formation, we find
that under the effects of both a stellar bar and a minor merger, star formation
activity mainly takes place along the galactic bar and arms, while the star
formation rate changes from the bar to the disk. With the help of spectral
synthesis, we find that strong star formation took place in the bar region
about 100 Myr ago, and the stellar bar might have been ∼10 Gyr old. By
comparing our results with the secular evolutionary scenario from Jogee et al.,
we suggest that NGC 7479 is possibly in a transitional stage of secular
evolution at present, and it may eventually become an earlier type galaxy or a
luminous infrared galaxy. We also note that the probable minor merger event
happened recently in NGC 7479, and we find two candidates for minor merger
remnants.Comment: 33 pages, 10 figures, 4 tables; accepted for publication in AJ, 142,
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