The Advanced Gradient Heating Facility (AGHF) is a European Space Agency (ESA) developed hardware. The AGHF was flown on STS-78, which featured four European PI's and two NASA PI's. The AGHFsupports the production of advanced semiconductor materials and alloys using the directional process, which depends on establishing a hot side and a cold side in the sample.
Microgravity
STS078-368-022 (20 June - 7 July 1996) --- Astronauts Susan J. Helms, payload commander, and Terence T. (Tom) Henricks, mission commander, prepare a sample cartridge containing semiconductor crystals for Spacelab research.  The crystals were later placed in the Advanced Gradient Heating Furnace (AGHF) in the Life and Microgravity Spacelab (LMS-1) Science Module.  The AGHF is designed for directional solidification of the crystals in the sample cartridges.  The microgravity of space allows the crystals to grow in a perfect state that can not be accomplished in Earth's gravity.
AGHF, Helms removes a sample from the LMS-1 Spacelab core facility module
STS078-396-015 (20 June - 7 July 1996) --- Payload specialist Jean-Jacques Favier, representing the French Space Agency (CNES), prepares a sample for the Advanced Gradient Heating Facility (AGHF) while wearing instruments that measure upper body movement.  The Torso Rotation Experiment (TRE) complements other vestibular studies that measure differences in the way human beings react physically to their surroundings in microgravity.  This is a typical Life and Microgravity Spacelab (LMS-1) mission scene, with several experiments being performed.  Astronaut Susan J. Helms, payload commander, assists Favier in the AGHF preparations.  Astronaut Richard M. Linnehan (bottom right), mission specialist, tests his muscle response with the Handgrip Dynamometer.  Astronaut Thomas T. (Tom) Henricks (far background), mission commander, offers assistance.
AGHF, TRE and TVD experiment activity in the Spacelab during LMS-1 mission
An etched sample of the aluminum indium alloy (magnified). When the hypermonotectic mixture is cooled in the Advanced Gradient Hearing Facility (AGHF), aluminum transitions to a solid first, trapping the indium in cylindrical fibers within the solid. Principal Investigator: Dr. Barry Andrews
Microgravity