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FALSIFIABLE Open, but could be disproved with a finite counterexample. - $1000
Does every finite graph with minimum degree at least 3 contain a cycle of length $2^k$ for some $k\geq 2$?
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Conjectured by Erdős and Gyárfás, who believed the answer must be negative, and in fact for every $r$ there must be a graph of minimum degree at least $r$ without a cycle of length $2^k$ for any $k\geq 2$.

This was solved in the affirmative if the minimum degree is larger than some absolute constant by Liu and Montgomery [LiMo20] (therefore disproving the above stronger conjecture of Erdős and Gyárfás). Liu and Montgomery prove a much stronger result: if the average degree of $G$ is sufficiently large then there is some large integer $\ell$ such that for every even integer $m\in [(\log \ell)^8,\ell]$, $G$ contains a cycle of length $m$.

An infinite tree with minimum degree $3$ shows that the answer is trivially false for infinite graphs.

This problem is #69 in Extremal Graph Theory in the graphs problem collection.

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This page was last edited 18 January 2026.

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Additional thanks to: Desmond Weisenberg and Yuval Wigderson

When referring to this problem, please use the original sources of Erdős. If you wish to acknowledge this website, the recommended citation format is:

T. F. Bloom, Erdős Problem #64, https://www.erdosproblems.com/64, accessed 2026-02-13