All very good points worth further research. I am also using a modified "Mars" to model the desert world of Kesh from "Kesh: The Sands of Destiny". Generally, I am able to get a "probability of life" of somewhere between 0.4 and 0.6, and that's not half bad, considering that we're talking about a remarkably arid world orbiting an M0.5 red dwarf primary that shares its orbit with an F8-type star that is in the process of evolving into a red giant!
A./
P. S. Magnetic field on, and mass is somewhere about 70 to 90% of earth's. Atmospheric pressure is a little higher at 1.06. Can't seem to get any respectably sized moon to orbit, though--Hill-sphere too small--the red dwarf primary yanks the moon away from Kesh, and the moon ends up in its own orbit. I do get stable solutions though, if the moon is very small--about the size of Dione--or rather, about the MASS of Dione, and orbiting at a distance of about 26000 to 45000 AU.
Planet is anywhere from 45 to 78 lunar distances from the red dwarf, distances presumably being measured from center to center, rather than surface to surface.