Incandescent lamp + suitable amplifier.
Stupid idea. But if it works, it ain't stupid.
Seriously, though: a high temperature resistor is a good source of noise, and the only thing hotter than white-hot tungsten is UV-hot plasma. And, plasma being an electromagnetically active material, it can exhibit complex excitations and resonances with geometry of the apparatus (accidental cavities, stubs and whatnot).
The only difficulty might be finding a bulb that matches well with its surroundings...
We're looking at:
https://www.google.com/search?q=sqrt%284+*+boltzmann+constant+*+2400+kelvin+*+50+ohms+*+1Hz%292.57 nV/rtHz is pretty low noise (most op-amps do considerably better..), but since we're contending with 0.9 nV/rtHz (50 ohms at 293K), it's not horrible. I mean, 9 dB must be good for something, right?
A 50 ohm bulb might be 6.3V at 125mA, or 12.6V at 250mA. Not so hard to find, I think. Use a bias tee (L from +V, coupling C to load) to power it. (Note that the noise power is the same regardless of size, as long as the temperature is there -- so it's to your advantage to use as small a lamp as possible!)
This looks reasonable:
http://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/JKL-Components/2203/?qs=sGAEpiMZZMtj1PWpWL2%252bvDwicDUvKr1eDUSCVRwqUUA%3dA bulb this small should be good into the GHz. The glass will give a somewhat lower impedance around the source, but that's probably an advantage given the wire leads, and wide spacing (twin-lead transmission line always has a highish impedance). Soldering it into a PCB, or poking it into PCB-mount sockets, should give reasonable SWR. (And you can even measure the SWR by transmitting into it! Just remember to do it while it's hot -- when unbiased and cold, it'll be a not-terrible short circuit instead!)
If you want the second hottest noise source on the EEVBlog Forum, I suggest doing it.
Tim