There is no approximate amount but the desert's sun can be heating the desert more than 98 degrees. Hope that helped. I am a science teacher. :)
There is no approximate amount but the desert's sun can be heating the desert more than 98 degrees. Hope that helped. I am a science teacher. :)
you can but it will die if it doesn't have the same amount of water as it does sunlight. it will have to much sunlight and that can kill it
there is always sunlight everyday every night through day.
Water,sunlight,and soil.As an example,a desert is dry and has much sunlight and less nutrients,and the rain forest has more water,less sunlight and more nutrients than a desert. A small amount of plants and animals can survive in the desert.While more plants and animals survive in the rain forest.
Daylight hours depend on the specific latitude and time of the year. The amount of daylight in the desert is the same as received by non-desert areas in the same region. Being a desert does not affect the amount of daylight.
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The only desert that would have 21 hours of sunlight would be Antarctica during the summer months.
Sunlight is absorbed by the surface of the soil which is heated. The soil then radiates that heat to the air above it, raising the temperature of the desert.
The Antarctic Desert has the least amount of vegetation.
Sand,sunlight,little amount of water, and either the wind or sand dunes themselves. You could also include a rock ;]
Some abiotic factors of the desert include extreme temperatures, low humidity, minimal precipitation, and sandy or rocky soil. These factors contribute to the harsh environment and limited resources for plant and animal life in the desert ecosystem.
The amount of sunlight reflected plus the amount absorbed must be equal to the amount of sunlight that hits the surface (incident sunlight) in order to account for all the incoming solar radiation.