There are two ways; one from SSMS and the other using TSQL.
From SQL Server 2008 Books Online:
To move an existing index to a different filegroup or partition
scheme
In Object Explorer, connect to an instance of the SQL Server Database
Engine and then expand that instance.
Expand Databases, expand the database that contains the table with
the specific index, and then expand
Tables.
Expand the table in which the index belongs and then expand Indexes.
Right-click the index to be moved and then select Properties.
On the Index Properties dialog box, select the Storage page.
Select the filegroup in which to move the index.
You cannot move indexes created using
a unique or primary key constraint by
using the Index Properties dialog box.
To move these indexes, you need to
drop the constraint using ALTER TABLE
(Transact-SQL) with the DROP
CONSTRAINT option and then re-create
the constraint on the desired
filegroup using ALTER TABLE
(Transact-SQL) with the ADD CONSTRAINT
option.
If the table or index is partitioned,
select the partition scheme in which
to move the index.
[Pre SQL Server 2008: To place an existing table on a different filegroup (SSMS)
- Expand Databases, expand the database containing table, and then click Tables.
- In the Details pane, right-click the table, and then click Design Table.
- Right-click any column, and then click Properties.
- On the Tables tab, in the Table Filegroup list, select the filegroup on which to place the table.
- Optionally, in the Text Filegroup list, select a filegroup on which to place any text, image, and text columns. ]
A more effective way is
to create a clustered index on the
table. If the table already has a
clustered index, you can use the
CREATE INDEX command's WITH
DROP_EXISTING clause to recreate the
clustered index and move it to a
particular filegroup. When a table has
a clustered index, the leaf level of
the index and the data pages of the
table essentially become one and the
same. The table must exist where the
clustered index exists, so if you
create or recreate a clustered
index—placing the index on a
particular filegroup—you're moving the
table to the new filegroup as well.
Credit: Brian Moran
You can create (or recreate) the clustered index specifying the new filegroup for the ON clause and that will move the table (data). But if you have nonclustered indexes and want them on the other filegroup you must drop and recreate them also specifying the new filegroup in the ON clause. Ref.