
I've recently been trying to figure out temperature variations in binary systems. So far I've figured out that the blackbody temperature at a given distance from the centre of mass (COM) of the system can be calculated by adding the [L/16(pi)(sigma)(D^2)] values for each star and then taking the fourth root of the sum (L = luminosity of given star in W, D = distance of planet from COM in m). (For solo stars you just take the fourth root of the equation and you have the blackbody temperature at that distance)
I'm trying to figure out the distance to the "frost line" though and I'm stumped - this is the distance at which the temperature of a blackbody would be 175K. I know that for a solo star you can just 175K into the blackbody equation and make D the subject to find the distance... but how do you do that for binary stars?
What I'm after is an equation that tells me the distance from the COM at which the blackbody temperature is 175K. I suspect that I don't just add the luminosities of the stars together linearly and use that total as the L value to figure that out though, I have a feeling I'll have to merge them some other way... anyone got any ideas?