A binary system of two tiny reddwarfstars in the northern parts of Virgo, FL Virginis lies against the backdrop of the extensive Virgo Cluster of galaxies. This system is one of the Sun's nearest neighbours in space at a distance of just 14.3 light years, but the component stars are each so dim that they only achieve a combined visual magnitude of +12.47, much too faint to be seen with the naked eye.
The two stars that make up the system follow a 15-year mutual orbit at an average distance of of 4.1 AU from each other (a distance that places them closer together than Jupiter's distance from the Sun). These are both low-massstars, each a little over a tenth of the mass of the Sun. Like many reddwarfs, both components known to be flare stars: each star in the pair shows brief rapid bursts of brightening at unpredictable intervals.