Most deserts experience their hottest temperatures in summer during the mid to late afternoon after the heat has built up during the day.
A region with high temperatures but little rain is typically a desert region. Deserts often experience extreme heat due to the lack of cloud cover and high levels of sunlight. The limited rainfall in deserts results in dry conditions that contribute to the high temperatures.
Deserts get little rainfall and some of them are quite hot - but not all. There are cold deserts also.
The low deserts of Kuwait are among the hottest in the world. These areas frequently experience extreme temperatures during the summer months, often exceeding 50°C (122°F). The combination of arid conditions and high temperatures makes Kuwait's deserts particularly inhospitable. Other regions, like parts of Iraq and Iran, also experience similar climatic extremes.
Extreme high temperatures are typically found in locations such as deserts, where there is little moisture and intense sunlight. Other places like deep valleys or urban heat islands can also experience unusually high temperatures due to various environmental factors.
Deserts have very high temperatures in the daytime, and lower temperatures in the nighttimes. In the day, the temperature can go over 105 degrees F.Clarification:Some deserts are hot but others, such as the Atacama Desert and Antarctica are cool or even bitter cold.
There are hot subtropical deserts, cold winter deserts and cool coastal deserts so you need to specify a particular desert location.
The climate in the Somali deserts is hot and dry, with very little rainfall and high temperatures during the day. Nighttime temperatures can drop significantly due to the lack of humidity.
Deserts have very low humidity and very high temperatures, very low temperatures, or can alternate between the two. Heat and low humidity can cause fatal dehydration in a matter of hours. Low temperatures can cause hypothermia. Some deserts are prone to dust storms.
Countries with hot dry homelands include Saudi Arabia, Australia, and Egypt. These countries typically experience arid or desert climates with high temperatures and low rainfall.
The oxygen content of air in deserts is not necessarily higher than in other regions. However, deserts can experience high temperatures and low humidity, which can make it feel like the air is richer in oxygen when, in fact, it is the dryness and heat that are creating this sensation.
The biome described is a desert. Deserts have high daytime temperatures, low nighttime temperatures, and very limited precipitation. Organisms in deserts are adapted to survive in extreme temperatures and dry conditions.
There is no meaningful answer to this question as there are over 2 dozen major desert regions in the world and each has different climate statistics. There are hot deserts, there are cold deserts and there are cool deserts.