The Sun resides in a region of relatively low stellar density in the
Milky Way. Thus, close stellar flybys are relatively rare. However, once in a while a star can come relatively close. One example is
Scholz's star (
WISE designation
WISE 0720−0846 or fully
WISE J072003.20−084651.2), which is a dim
binary stellar system 22
light-years (6.8
parsecs) from the
Sun in the
constellation Monoceros near the
galactic plane. The system passed through the
Solar System's
Oort cloud roughly 70,000 years ago.
Gliese 710 or
HIP 89825, an orange 0.6
M☉ star in the
constellation Serpens Cauda, is projected to pass near the
Sun in about 1.29 million years at a predicted minimum distance of 0.051
parsecs—0.1663
light-years (10,520
astronomical units) (about 1.60 trillion km) – about 1/25th of the current distance to
Proxima Centauri. == Close flybys in different environments ==