Due to lack of humidity and cloud cover, the desert cools rapidly after sunset.
The very dry air of the desert holds little moisture and thus holds little heat so as soon as the sun sets, the desert cools considerably. Clear, cloudless skies also help to quickly release heat at night. Mos deserts have very low temperatures at night.
A desert usually has little cloud cover and high humidity that would hold in day time heating. Therefore, the desert cools quite quickly when the sun sets.
Sunshine during the day heats the surface of the desert. That then heats the air above it. Since the desert has few clouds of high humidity to hold this heat after the sun sets, the heat radiates back into space and the desert cools down quickly.
Earth or ground heats up and cools off more rapidly than water. Large bodies of water act as a heat sink. Areas near a coast are cooled during the day by breezes from the water and are kept warmer at night from the heat coming off the water at night. Desert temperatures have a greater variation between night and day because there is no ocean or sea nearby to moderate the temperatures.
At night. Because, the very dry air of the desert holds very little moisture, thus holds very little heat, so as soon as the sun sets, the desert cools down considerably.
The desert has few clouds and little humidity that would act as a blanket to hold in the heat. Therefore, the heat accumulated during daylight hours rapidly radiates back into space.
It rarely gets below freezing at night in the hot deserts. However, it can quickly get quite chilly. Humidity and clouds are rare in the desert. Without clouds and humidity to hold heat, the warmth of the day rapidly radiates back into space once the sun goes down.
It is not necessarily high. The Gobi Desert is quite cold. Even the American southwest desert gets pretty chilly at night. And - believe it or not - part of Antarctica is a desert. It is the amount of precipitation that makes it a desert, not the temperature.
Desert night lizard was created in 1859.
That depends on which desert you are referring to but the Antarctic Desert has measured a temperature of -135 degrees at night during the winter.
A desert cools much faster than a swamp as rock and sand does not retain heat very well, while the water in a swamp is a very good retainer of heat.Clarification:Clouds and high humidity act as a blanket that prevents the heat from a swamp from radiating into space once the sun goes down. The desert usually has no such protection and the heat quickly radiates into space once the sun goes down.
Since deserts usually have little humidity and no cloud cover, there is nothing to hold the daytime heating after the sun sets. Therefore, the desert cools down quickly after sunset.