No dark matter detected Physicists from the GNOME collaboration did not detect particles of axionic dark matter after analyzing data collected during the second season of the global network of magnetometers. The results of the analysis, however, allowed the researchers to set limits on the mass of particles of axionic dark matter and the constant of its interaction with ordinary matter. Scientists expect that the ongoing modification of the network of detectors will help significantly increase the accuracy of the experiment. The research is published in Nature Physics (https://go.nature.com/3mxAfIt). The hypothesis that about 80% of the mass of all matter in the Universe is invisible dark matter explains many astronomical observations: both the anomalously high speeds of stars at the periphery of galaxies and galaxies at the periphery of galactic clusters, and the exact shape of the spectrum of inhomogeneities in the temperature of the cosmic microwave background ... Despite convincing evidence in favor of the existence of dark matter, not a single ground-based experiment has succeeded in registering the particles of which it is composed.