High-precision low-temperature thermometry is a challenge for experimental
quantum physics and quantum sensing. Here we consider a thermometer modelled by
a dynamically-controlled multilevel quantum probe in contact with a bath.
Dynamical control in the form of periodic modulation of the energy-level
spacings of the quantum probe can dramatically increase the maximum accuracy
bound of low-temperatures estimation, by maximizing the relevant quantum Fisher
information. As opposed to the diverging relative error bound at low
temperatures in conventional quantum thermometry, periodic modulation of the
probe allows for low-temperature thermometry with temperature-independent
relative error bound. The proposed approach may find diverse applications
related to precise probing of the temperature of many-body quantum systems in
condensed matter and ultracold gases, as well as in different branches of
quantum metrology beyond thermometry, for example in precise probing of
different Hamiltonian parameters in many-body quantum critical systems.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure