As surprising as it may sound, try calling the law enforcement agency or Sheriff's Office in whatever jurisdiction you think may hold the warrant, and simply ask.
Yes, police may come to your house if there is a warrant for your arrest.
Yes. What do you think a warrant is??
If they are acting under the authority of a Governor's Warrant (aka: Extradition Order), yes they can.
Probably, but you might get arrested in addition to obtaining the ID card. If the offense described in the Georgia arrest warrant is serious enough for the Georgia authorities to come and get you, the Florida Highway Patrol will be notified when you apply for the ID, and will arrest you on the spot if they can. Some state motor vehicle bureaus will not issue a drivers license or ID card to anyone with an outstanding arrest warrant, extraditable or otherwise.
If the officers can accurately identify the person wanted, or can verify a proper warrant then they will likely arrest you.
An arrest warrant does not grant any form of entry into a residence. If you answer the door they can arrest you, if not they cannot. The exception to this is warrants for felonies, which allow them to enter the premises if they have cause to believe you are there or that evidence of where you have gone might be found there.
They might, they'll go wherever they think they can find you.
If the police have articulable probable cause to place you under arrest at the time they made the arrest, they may do so at any time and in any place. Insufficient information is given in the question about the issuance of the warrant, which may have been for an entirely different cause. If the police made an illegal arrest it is a defensible reason for the dropping of the charges.
Yes, the police can request you to come in for questioning, but you have the right to refuse unless they have a warrant for your arrest.
All the time man. They are sneaky.
It depends - in this day and age if the aouthorities check the passenger manifest against criminal databaases and come up with your name - yes - you can be arrested.
Before a Customs agent would make an arrest for a warrant of any type, the agent would have to believe the agency holding the warrant would come to the port of entry where the arrest was made to pick up the person with the warrant. If the agency is adjacent to the port of entry (e.g. a San Diego warrant in San Ysidro), this is likely. If the agency holding the warrant was distant to the port of entry, it's unlikely they will expend the time and money to fetch someone with a misdemeanor warrant.