Every desert has its own weather statistics so you need to specify a particular desert. There are hot and cold deserts. The hottest temperature ever reliably measured in a hot desert was 134 degrees F. in Death Valley at Furnace Creek in 1913.
No necessarily. There are cold deserts where the temperature remains quite mild or even cold in the summer.
Some cold deserts such as the Great Basin and Gobi Deserts may approach or exceed 100 degrees F. in the summer.
In some deserts, such as the Mojave and Sahara Deserts, the temperature may approach 140 degrees F on a hot, summer day.
The answer to your question depends upon the specific desert and season of the year. In the summer the hot deserts will usually drop to 60-70 degrees F on a summer night. In the winter the cold deserts could drop to below -20 degrees F at night.
Every desert has its own weather statistics. There are hot deserts and there are cold deserts. In the Antarctic Desert the temperature may plunge below -100 degrees F. In hot deserts during the summer the temperature may drop below 60 degrees F. at night.
While deserts can get quite hot in the summer months, the temperature can, on occasion, get quite cold for short periods in the winter. Summer high temperatures may exceed 100 degrees F. but the temperature may fall to well below 20 degrees F. for short periods in the winter.
Cacti occur only in the Americas and the temperature can vary from -20 to -40 degrees F. in parts of the Great Basin and Colorado Plateau Deserts in winter to over +130 degrees F. in the Mojave Desert in summer.
That depends upon the desert but parts of the Sahara as well as of the Mojave Desert can exceed 130 degrees F. in summer months.
That would depend upon which hot desert. Some hot deserts may approach 140 degree F. in summer.
"Cold Deserts temperature in winter ranges from -2 to 4° C and in the summer 21 to 26° C a year"Quoted from http://www.blueplanetbiomes.org/desert.htmYou can find more info there :)
Cold or cold winter deserts may have temperatures quitr hot in the summer but can get bitterly cold in the winter. Examples: the Great Basin Desert, the Gobi Desert.
The average temperature in a desert can vary depending on the location, but it is typically high during the day and low during the night. Daytime highs can reach over 100°F (38°C) or more, while nighttime lows can drop to below freezing. Overall, deserts are characterized by extreme temperature fluctuations between day and night.