Thermometers are very effective in measuring temperatures, in both C and F degrees.
in wotstok reserch center in Antarctica was measured -89 degrees Celsius
The coldest measured in a desert was -128 degrees F. in Antarctica.
The Antarctic Desert has measured a low of -129 degrees F.
The coldest temperature ever measured in a cold desert was in Antarctica at -135.8 degrees F.
The lowest temperature measured in a desert was -135.8 degrees F in Antarctica and the hottest reliably measured air temperature was +134 degrees F in the Mojave Desert.
The coldest temperature ever measured in a desert was -135.8 degrees F in Antarctica.
The highest temperature recorded in Antarctica is 18.3°C (64.9°F), which was measured on February 6, 2020, on Seymour Island, part of the Antarctic Peninsula.
Deserts are a place of extreme temperatures. Since most (not all) deserts are away from large masses of water (oceans), there is no mechanism for temperature regulation. They can get extremely cold very quickly.
Annual precipitation in Antarctica has to be measured in snow fall rather than rain. Since the average temperature is usually -70 degrees Fahrenheit, the average annual snow fall, measured as a water equivalent, is 6.5 inches per year.
For a continent that covers 10% of the earth's surface, with so few temperature sensors -- probably a number you can count less than 100 -- you could calculate an 'average' temperature. (What do you include in average: the annual temperature, a monthly measurement, a daily number, including wind chill, and so forth.) However, it would only be a statistical number, since the true temperatures are not measured, determining an 'average temperature in Antarctica' is technically impossible. That said, Antarctica is the coldest continent. It's too cold for animals and plants, so whatever 'average temperature' there may be, actually, the number can only be a curiosity, and not practically useful. The lowest temperature on earth was measured on Antarctica: −89.2 °C (−128.6 °F; 184.0 K), recorded at Vostok, Antarctica, a research station supported by Russia, on July 21, 1983.
The coldest temperature ever recorded in Antarctica was -128.6 degrees Fahrenheit (-89.2 degrees Celsius) at the Soviet Union's Vostok Station on July 21, 1983. This extreme low temperature was measured using satellite data.
A reading of 135.8 degrees below zero (degrees F.) was measured in Antarctica, using remote sensing from satellites.