Effective cross-sections of nano-objects are fundamental properties that determine their ability to interact with light. However, measuring cross-sections for individual resonators directly and quantitatively remains challenging, particularly because of the very low signals involved. In this contribution, we present how we experimentally measured the thermal emission cross-section of metal-insulator-metal nano-resonators using a hyperuniform distribution based on a hierarchical Poisson-disk algorithm. This method relies on the specific properties of hyperuniform distributions, which ensure that no short-range or long-range correlations between resonators disturb the measured signal.
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