Which desert? All are different.
The temperature in the Antarctic Desert can drop well below minus 100 degrees F.
Cold winter deserts can drop well below 0 degrees F in winter. The Gobi has been known to drop to -40 degrees or even colder. The Antarctic Desert has had a temperature measured at -135.8 degrees F.
The Gobi Desert can approach or even exceed 100 degrees F. in the summer but the temperature can drop to near -40 degrees F. in winter.
The temperature would depend upon the specific desert. It could be as cold as minus 120 degrees F. in Antarctica to as warm as 80 degrees F. or more in some of the hot subtropical deserts.
Every desert is different. However, the coldest temperature ever measured in a desert was -135.8 degrees F. in Antarctica. The Gobi Desert occasionally has temperatures that drop to -40 degrees F in winter and the Great Basin Desert will drop below 0 degrees at times.
The Antarctic Desert has been known to plunge well below -100 degrees F. The Gobi has experienced temperatures of -40 degrees F in winter and the Colorado Plateau Desert and Great Basin Desert may drop below -20 degrees F on some cold winter nights.
The temperature depends on the season of the year and location. In the summer the temperature can exceeds 120 degrees F in the southern deserts of the state. In the winter the temperature can drop well below 0 degrees F at night in the northern desert areas.
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 Antarctic Desert has measured a low of -129 degrees F.
The average temperature (high) is about 25 degrees C (77 degrees F) but some areas can get even hotter. Lows in same areas may drop to near or below 0 degrees C. at night. It is considered a cool (or cold) desert. The temperature is moderated by the cold Pacific Ocean to the west.
Depending on the specific desert and season of the year, the temperature can run a range from -129 degrees F. in the Antarctic Desert to +134 degrees F in the Mojave Desert.
The answer depends on which specific cold desert. If you are referring to the Antarctic, the coldest temperature ever recorded there was -128 degrees. The Gobi Desert of China may reach 100 degrees F in the summer and cool off to 40 degrees below zero in winter. The Great Basin Desert is similar - a very hot summer and a very cold winter.