There are about 28 deserts in the world, each with its own climate data. Please specify a particular location.
Every desert has different climate statistics. However, temperatures can range from -135 degrees F in Antarctica during winter to +134 degrees in the Mojave Desert in summer.
The Simpson Desert in Australia has an average annual temperature of around 25 degrees Celsius. Temperatures can vary greatly throughout the year, with summer temperatures often exceeding 40 degrees Celsius and winter temperatures dropping to around 5 degrees Celsius.
Which desert? All are different.
Annual Average Temperature (F): 76.4 Annual Average High Temperature (F): 85.9 Annual Average Low Temperature (F): 69.1 Annual Average Precipitation (in): 43.9
about 64 degrees F. which is 18 C.
The average annual temperature in the desert is 24 °C (75 °F), which varies with altitude.
The climate is extreme: annual temperatures can range from near-freezing in the winter to more than 50 degrees C (122 degrees F) during the summer.
That really depends on which desert and what you consider "really cold". As an example: Antarctica (the coldest region on the earth) is considered a desert and no matter what you consider "really cold" Antarctica is probably colder than that during the winter! For comparison... Sahara Desert average winter temperature: 13 ºC (55 ºF) Arctic Desert (North pole area) average winter temperature −40 °C (−40 °F) Arabian Desert average winter temperature 41 °F (5 °C) - with frequent frosts Gobi Desert average winter temperature ~ -13 °F (-25 °C) - but reaching -40°F/-40 °C at times Kalahari Desert average winter temperature ~32 °F (0 °C) Patagonian Desert average winter temperature 34 °F (3 °C) Great Victoria Desert average winter temperature 41 °F (5 °C) - with frequent frosts Great Basin Desert average winter temperature ~32 °F (0 °C) Note that even within these deserts there are considerable variations, especially with altitude; higher altitudes are colder. Deserts also characteristically have wider temperature swings than more humid areas. Temperature swings of 95 °F (35 °C) in 24 hours are not uncommon in the Gobi Desert. The Saraha has seen daytime to nighttime temperature swing from 37.5 to -0.5 °C (100 to 31 °F).
There is no winter in the Kalahari desert, only a wet season and a dry season.
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.
The desert biome typically has the highest average annual temperature due to its dry and arid conditions. These biomes often experience extreme temperature fluctuations between day and night, leading to very high daytime temperatures.
Each desert is different so you need to be a bit more specific.