Deserts are hard to predict actually, there is no set "temperature". Deserts are like Roller Coasters and very there temperature. In the afternoon, the temperature may rise to over 110°F. At nightfall the temperature can drop below 30°F.
Somewhere between 60°C (140°F) and -40° (C & F!)
Clarification:
Each desert has its own statistics. There are hot deserts (Sahara, Mojave) where the temperature may exceed 130 degrees F. There are cold deserts, such as Antarctica, where the temperature can plunge to well below minus 100 degrees F. at times.
The Mojave Desert
Negev Desert
Temperatures can vary from -135 degrees F in the Antarctic Desert to +134 degrees F in the Mojave Desert.
The desert located at 35 degrees north and 117 degrees west is the Mojave Desert. It is primarily located in southeastern California and extends into parts of Nevada, Arizona, and Utah. The Mojave Desert is known for its unique ecosystems and iconic landscapes.
Great Victorian Desert in Australia
There are a number of deserts that occasionally reach 44 degrees C (111 F):Sahara Arabian Desert Syrian Desert Mojave Desert Sonoran Desert Chihuahuan Desert others
Parts of the Sonoran Desert can exceed 110 degrees F during the day in summer.
The desert located at 25 degrees north and 34 degrees east in Africa is the Sahara Desert, which is the largest hot desert in the world. It spans across several countries in North Africa, including Algeria, Libya, Egypt, and Morocco.
There are about 24 major desert regions in the world and each has different climate statistics. The temperature can vary from -129 degrees in Antarctica to +134 degrees in the Mojave Desert.
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.
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.
Each of the many deserts in the world has its own climate statistics. The coldest that has ever been registered in a desert was -128 degrees F in Antarctica and the hottest ever reliably registered was +134 degrees F in Death Valley of the Mojave Desert.