http://www.ocii.com/~dpwozney/apollo1.htm
Oh and what is that then?
Spacecraft DO have an exhaust plume/trail when in space.
As for the site itself, was the first one that showed me what I wanted to see.
Sorry, no... that's not an exhaust trail.
Of course, the instant that gas is expelled, it is visible. In fact, since it's not going into an already-existing medium, it's MORE visible. But that's not a counterargument, as you seem to be saying it is.
See, an "exhaust trail" lingers for more than a fraction of a second. Rocket engines, in atmosphere, leave a long trail of smoke and vapor. High-flying aircraft leave contrails and vapor trails. Ground-to-air missiles leave exhaust trails.
The reason that they do this is that the expelled exhaust is able to linger once it has reached the same pressure as the local atmosphere. It dissipated eventually, but once it expands to reach atmospheric pressure, if the air was perfectly still, it would only dissipate through "brownian motion."
In space... well... I hope you can see why this couldn't happen. You NEVER reach "equilibrium" and you never reach equalization of pressure between the expelled exhaust and the surrounding medium... because there IS no "surrounding medium." It dissipates, and continues to dissipate, essentially forever. And, obviously, while in an atmosphere the rate of dissipation slows as you approach equilibrium, in space, the rate never slows.
That's why there are no "exhaust trails" in space.
Make sense?