We present the SLoWPoKES-II catalog of low-mass visual binaries identified
from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey by matching photometric distances. The
candidate pairs are vetted by comparing the stellar density at their respective
Galactic positions to Monte Carlo realizations of a simulated Milky Way. In
this way, we are able to identify large numbers of bona fide wide binaries
without the need of proper motions. 105,537 visual binaries with angular
separations of ∼1-20", are identified, each with a probability of chance
alignment of ≲5%. This is the largest catalog of bona fide wide
binaries to date, and it contains a diversity of systems---in mass, mass
ratios, binary separations, metallicity, and evolutionary states---that should
facilitate follow-up studies to characterize the properties of M dwarfs and
white dwarfs. There is a subtle but definitive suggestion of multiple
populations in the physical separation distribution, supporting earlier
findings. We suggest that wide binaries are comprised of multiple populations,
most likely representing different formation modes. There are 141 M7 or later
wide binary candidates, representing a 7-fold increase in the number currently
known. These binaries are too wide to have been formed via the ejection
mechanism. Finally, we find that ~6% of spectroscopically confirmed M dwarfs
are not included in the SDSS STAR catalog; they are misclassified as extended
sources due to the presence of a nearby or partially resolved companion. The
SLoWPoKES-II catalog is publicly available to the entire community on the world
wide web via the Filtergraph data visualization portal.Comment: Accepted by AJ. 14 pages, 10 figures. Long tables omitted; see
http://slowpokes.vanderbilt.edu/visualization.html instea