“…These results suggest that some of the two-dimensional materials considered in this work, particularly those with large magnetic anisotropy, may present a low energy spin excitation spectrum that differs significantly from the one determined by a gapless semiclassical single magnon dispersion curve. Therefore, we speculate that, in systems with large magnetic anisotropy, multi-magnon processes can play an important role in determining the low-energy magnetic excitations, although the intensity of the corresponding signal is expected to be weaker [63] and, thus, are relevant in the interpretation of the low-temperature properties of these two-dimensional ferromagnets. Its confirmation, of course, requires the use of precise and sensitive techniques, like Raman scattering [22] or FMR [15][16][17].…”