Consider a system of $N$ non-interacting identical fermions of spin $s$, spin quantum number $m_i=m_{s_i}$and position coordinates $\mathbf{r}_i$. Let $\alpha$ denote a state specified by the numbers $n,j_n$, with $n$ the energy level, $j_n \in \{1,2,...,g_n\}$ and where $g_n$ is the degeneracy of the $n$-th energy level. If each particle is in a spin-orbit state $\psi_{\alpha_i}(\mathbf{r}_i,m_i)$, an antisymmetrized state of the system can be constructed with a Slater determinant as follows:
$$ \Psi_{\alpha_{1}, \alpha_{2}, \ldots, \alpha_{N}}\left(\mathbf{r}_{1}, m_{1} ; \ldots ; \mathbf{r}_{N}, m_{N}\right)=\frac{1}{\sqrt{N !}}\left|\begin{array}{cccc} \psi_{\alpha_{1}}\left(\mathbf{r}_{1}, m_{1}\right) & \psi_{\alpha_{1}}\left(\mathbf{r}_{2}, m_{2}\right) & \ldots & \psi_{\alpha_{1}}\left(\mathbf{r}_{N}, m_{N}\right) \\ \psi_{\alpha_{2}}\left(\mathbf{r}_{1}, m_{1}\right) & \psi_{\alpha_{2}}\left(\mathbf{r}_{2}, m_{2}\right) & \ldots & \psi_{\alpha_{2}}\left(\mathbf{r}_{N}, m_{N}\right) \\ \vdots & \vdots & & \vdots \\ \psi_{\alpha_{N}}\left(\mathbf{r}_{1}, m_{1}\right) & \psi_{\alpha_{N}}\left(\mathbf{r}_{2}, m_{2}\right) & \ldots & \psi_{\alpha_{N}}\left(\mathbf{r}_{N}, m_{N}\right) \end{array}\right| $$
However, is it always sufficient to use a single Slater determinant in order to construct the state of the system? Could it be necessary (or even possible) to use more than one determinants?