English

Pancyclicity of Hamiltonian and highly connected graphs

Combinatorics 2009-03-27 v1

Abstract

A graph G on n vertices is Hamiltonian if it contains a cycle of length n and pancyclic if it contains cycles of length \ell for all 3n3 \le \ell \le n. Write α(G)\alpha(G) for the independence number of GG, i.e. the size of the largest subset of the vertex set that does not contain an edge, and κ(G)\kappa(G) for the (vertex) connectivity, i.e. the size of the smallest subset of the vertex set that can be deleted to obtain a disconnected graph. A celebrated theorem of Chv\'atal and Erd\H{o}s says that GG is Hamiltonian if κ(G)α(G)\kappa(G) \ge \alpha(G). Moreover, Bondy suggested that almost any non-trivial conditions for Hamiltonicity of a graph should also imply pancyclicity. Motivated by this, we prove that if κ(G)600α(G)\kappa(G) \ge 600\alpha(G) then G is pancyclic. This establishes a conjecture of Jackson and Ordaz up to a constant factor. Moreover, we obtain the more general result that if G is Hamiltonian with minimum degree δ(G)600α(G)\delta(G) \ge 600\alpha(G) then G is pancyclic. Improving an old result of Erd\H{o}s, we also show that G is pancyclic if it is Hamiltonian and n150α(G)3n \ge 150\alpha(G)^3. Our arguments use the following theorem of independent interest on cycle lengths in graphs: if δ(G)300α(G)\delta(G) \ge 300\alpha(G) then G contains a cycle of length \ell for all 3δ(G)/813 \le \ell \le \delta(G)/81.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0903.4567,
  title  = {Pancyclicity of Hamiltonian and highly connected graphs},
  author = {Peter Keevash and Benny Sudakov},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0903.4567},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

15 pages, 1 figure

R2 v1 2026-06-21T12:44:48.600Z