Between May and October there is normally no rainfall. Blue sky for weeks is usual, quit warm temperatures between 18 to 22 degrees during daytime, but during the night temperatures can easily drop down to minus 7 degrees.
Deserts typicaly cool down during the night time and the temperatures drop as the year progresses toward the winter months.
Great hole in the Kalahari desert is a deep hole in the ground with 50 metres of side walls. Beasts of the Kalahari often fall into it at night. Once there were two men travelling through the Kalahari Desert unaware of this hole. They decided to stay for the night, not knowing that hole was just next to them . The man who was sleeping on his bull cart fell into the hole when his cart slid down and fell in. But he survived. The other man thinking that his friend had moved on or perished, left without looking for him. The man that was in the hole was badly hurt and took days to recover in terrific conditions, but he was a tireless person and never gave up. As a fact he was stuck in that hole for three years and survived by eating any animal that fell into the hole. Three Years later he'd made a ladder from his bull cart and came out of the hole. As they travelled through the desert, three bushmen found him without water and at the point of perishing.
Yes, it is the hottest during the day and cooles down durning the night. When it is night in the desert that's when all of the animals come out there.
A desert is sometimes defined as an area with a rainfall of less than 250mm a year, therefore New Zealand does not have any significant areas of true desert. Some small areas of inland Otago and Canterbury in the South Island do have this low an annual rainfall, but only just. One area is around the town of Alexandra, which has an annual rainfall of less than 400mm. Some reasons for the misconception that New Zealand has desert is the name for one of the State highways in the central North Island being the Desert Road and there is a region known as the Rangipo desert. It has a much higher rainfall than a desert,(about four times as much) but has high winds and poor soils and is at a high altitude, so seems like a desert because plants struggle to survive. The Rangipo "desert" is on the volcanic plateau in the central North Island.
There are about 10 major desert areas in Australia, each with its own climate statistics. Please specify a location.
Physical weathering from temperature changes is most common on the shorelines, because waves are able to take down rocks that have been weathers. They would be least noticeable inland, in desert areas with little forestation.
It is more like radiant heat, depending on the location of the desert. The Sonoran desert near Arizona/Mexico naturally is cooler at night after the sun goes down.
it goes into the minuses depending on the desert
the green house effect does without it, the earth's temperatures would go way past freezing, every NIGHT when the sun went down!
Because Antarctica is a "polar" region, there is no precipitation, it has no lakes or rivers and is in fact the driest continent. Average temperatures in the Antarctic interior get down to -70 degrees Celsius during the winter months and -35 degrees Celsius in the warmer months. The coastal temperatures are much warmer with a range of -15 to -32 Celsius in Winter and -5 to +5 Celsius in Summer. The interior of Antarctica is considered the world's driest desert because the extreme cold freezes water vapour out of the air. Annual snowfall on the polar plateau is equivalent to less than 5 cm of rain. Antarctica is also the world's largest desert at 14,000,000 sq km.it is antartica
Most hot deserts quickly cool down at night because there is little humidity and cloud cover to hold in daytime heating. The heat radiates back into space and the desert become quite cool at night.
The day side of the moon can get up to 123 degrees Celsius, the night side of the moon can get down to -233 Celsius.