Only in a unit test context or by calling an asynchronous method.
In a unit test you can execute code within Test.startTest() and Test.stopTest() to give the code within that block its own set or parameters (only available in unit tests).
If you call an asynchrnous method (@future, batch, scheduled) the code within that asynronous method when run will have its own set of governor limits.
Otherwise you cannot and need to refactor/improve your code to consume less resources.
Governor limits are (broadly speaking) provided on a per transaction basis. In order to get a new set of governor limits you need to start a new transaction with Salesforce.
Are you hitting the governor limits with a particular process?
Only in a unit test context or by calling an asynchronous method.
In a unit test you can execute code within Test.startTest() and Test.stopTest() to give the code within that block its own set or parameters (only available in unit tests).
If you call an asynchrnous method (@future, batch, scheduled) the code within that asynronous method when run will have its own set of governor limits.
Otherwise you cannot and need to refactor/improve your code to consume less resources.
In a unit test you can execute code within Test.startTest() and Test.stopTest() to give the code within that block its own set or parameters (only available in unit tests).
If you call an asynchrnous method (@future, batch, scheduled) the code within that asynronous method when run will have its own set of governor limits.
Otherwise you cannot and need to refactor/improve your code to consume less resources.
All Answers
Are you hitting the governor limits with a particular process?
In a unit test you can execute code within Test.startTest() and Test.stopTest() to give the code within that block its own set or parameters (only available in unit tests).
If you call an asynchrnous method (@future, batch, scheduled) the code within that asynronous method when run will have its own set of governor limits.
Otherwise you cannot and need to refactor/improve your code to consume less resources.