No, because the memory cells sit behind a wall of
input / output buffers, read / write circuitry etc.
Close-in fields are dominated by local cell signal
and power over which remote charge has no authority.
Only if the static electricity is discharged directly into
some pin and causes a write event, or buggers the
address during a write event, or drops the chip power
below retention voltage or above damage voltage,
would there be a possibility of bit-flip. Static as in just
sitting there, does nothing.
About the only way to flip a core memory cell is a
neutron, proton or heavy ion strike. Neither is likely in
a low altitude terrestrial application. Though neutrons
through nuclear reactions or knock-offs, at high altitude,
have been a problem for aviation and server farms.