“…Even in the case of numerical diagonalization, for instance, a system of 32-42 ( 1 2 )-spins requires 128 GB-32 TB of local memory which is beyond the capacity for most computers in the world, in the best case. Nevertheless, multiples approaches to such dimensional problem, which imply basic many-body techniques reaching successful results through a generalization of the behavior of a single spin-architecture, have been proposed [14,[28][29][30]. The advantage of these and other approaches, from point of view of realistic computations is clear: It is easier to handle large matrices and their components in an algebraic way, than numerically diagonalize a large matrix.…”