Short answer: No. Sorry!
There's no such mechanism in the standard API and you can't use WeakReference to build such a thing because references relate only to the reachability of objects, not to the CPU activity.
But that isn't to say that the analogy isn't neat, and it isn't to say it's a bad idea! I rather like it.
One hope you have is to assign a low Thread Priority - but as has been noted elsewhere, these are subtle and quick to anger. A low priority thread should give way to higher priority ones, and would be suitable for the while-loop thread. The dangers are that different OS scheduling systems may cause your low-priority thread to starve, especially if you aren't quite careful to make sure the higher priority threads block occasionally. You might find wildly variable behaviour on multiprocessors vs single processors.
Given that you want the task to actually terminate on CPU load ... you could use System.nanoTime()
to time the execution of each pass of the loop, and if it exceeds some threshold, then quit the while loop. I don't like this much though: it's susceptible to GC pauses and natural variations causing the action to abort.
Alternatively, you could use JMX to measure the actual CPU load, see How to get percentage of CPU usage of OS from java - and abort the while-loop if it exceeds a threshold. You could have a monitoring thread that raises a Thread.interrupt() on your worker to abort any blocking activities. I can imagine you would spend a lifetime tweaking it though - too eager in some circumstances, too lethargic in others; wildly variable on different sized hosts.
And if you want to kill threads while they are actually running ... that starts getting really quite hard. I'm starting to think there might be other approaches, but that's hard to say without knowing more about the broader problem you are trying to solve.
Still neat though.