Water regulates temperatures good. Places with more rain are usually less extreme temperature. Plants hold water for longer than places without plants. Places with no plants or rain get really really hot in the day and really really cold at night. The darker the sand is the more it absorbs light and gets warm. Places like death valley have dark reddish sand and minimal water and plants.
For the same reason mountains have snow on them all year round.
The higher you go the colder it gets, the lower you go the hotter it gets, and Death Valley is one of the lowest points in the world. A bit less than 300 feet below sea level.
And the reason the temperature changes is just because the air is more dense at lower altitudes.
And a side note for some of the other commentators: water vapor is the most effective greenhouse gas in our atmosphere. Clouds would make it even *hotter.*
Back to OP’s question, not only is it in a rain shadow, it also below sea level. That, coupled with the fact that 14,000 peaks are causing that rain shadow, creates a gigantic elevation change that allows air to condense ( and heat) as it sinks from crest to valley bottom. This phenom is called ‘orographic heating’ and is the primary driver of Death Valley’s high temperatures.
Latest Answers