HD 141569, a triple star system, has been intensively observed and studied
for its massive debris disk. It was rather regarded as a gravitationally bound
triple system but recent measurements of the HD 141569A radial velocity seem to
invalidate this hypothesis. The flyby scenario has therefore to be investigated
to test its compatibility with the observations. We present a study of the
flyby scenario for the HD141569 system, by considering 3 variants: a sole
flyby, a flyby associated with one planet and a flyby with two planets. We use
analytical calculations and perform N-body numerical simulations of the flyby
encounter. The binary orbit is found to be almost fixed by the observational
constraint on a edge-on plane with respect to the observers. If the binary has
had an influence on the disk structure, it should have a passing time at the
periapsis between 5000 and 8000 years ago and a distance at periapsis between
600 and 900 AU. The best scenario for reproducing the disk morphology is a
flyby with only 1 planet. For a 2 Mj (resp. 8 Mj) planet, its eccentricity must
be around 0.2 (resp. below 0.1). In the two cases, its apoapsis is about 130
AU. Although the global disk shape is reasonably well reproduced, some features
cannot be explain by the present model and the likehood of the flyby event
remains an issue. Dynamically speaking, HD 141569 is still a puzzling system