Captain America Shield Deflection

Captain America Shield Deflection - American Oval Signage

So, watching Captain America: Winter Soldier, I think I spotted a flaw regarding to Captain America's shield properties. There is a scene where Cap is fighting Winter Soldier and his henchmen alongside Falcon and Black Widow. One of the henchmen starts to fire with a minigun and Steve Rogers uses his shield to deflect the bullets and hit another henchmen.

But, watching this scene from Captain America: First Avenger, Howard Stark explains that the vibranium, the material from which the shield is made, is completely vibration absorbent. Then, Peggy Carter shoots at the shield and the bullets completely stop on impacting the shield.

There is some explanation on how the bullets were deflected in Winter Soldier movie?



Best Answer

Even though it's just vibranium -- with Capt. having no innate relationship with this material -- the shield most often behaves in a way that perfectly reflects Capt.'s intentions at that time.

For example: He wants a bullet to stop upon contact with the shield, it stops. He wants to throw the shield and have it bounce off 12 things before coming back to him, it does. He wants to ricochet bullets off the shield to target enemies, no problem.

Any conclusions/analysis beyond this and it all falls apart.


The de facto proof of how Capt.'s shield doesn't consistently adhere to even MCU physics/claims, is the fact that Capt.'s shield nearly always produces sound upon being struck. If the shield were truly 100% vibration absorbent, then, it wouldn't produce any sound.

For Capt.'s shield to match the MCU claims, then, physically speaking, it would have to:

  1. have enough stored potential energy to sufficiently convert the external kinetic energy being applied to the shield to "manageable" internal kinetic energy (Capt.'s shield would actually be a kind of spring system); and

  2. the dampening effect of the shield (spring system) would be infinite in magnitude and instantaneously effective.




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Captain America Shield Throwing and Catching Compilation [IMAX/Open Matte HD]




More answers regarding captain America Shield Deflection

Answer 2

There is really no explanation other than this is a plot hole. At times, the shield absorbs kinetic energy, as with the bullets. At others, Cap is bouncing it off all kinds of things with inhuman accuracy. There is no explanation given in any of the movies as to why this is the case.

Answer 3

Now I'm no expert in MCU science, but if Hank Pym can carry a tank like a key-ring, you know you have to take science in the MCU with a huge grain of salt. Nevertheless, I think that it probably has something to do with the fact that minigun bullets are faster than pistol bullets. Or at least they have a "oomph" on impact greater than that of a pistol bullet. Either way, this shows that the in the minigun's case, the shield can absorb more vibrational energy. Maybe this energy is released at the instant one bullet is blocked and the next one hits. This causes it to reflect the bullets from the minigun as shown due to its higher rate of fire, so the "oomph" from one bullet deflects the next, and the "oomph" from it, the next. Then again, GRAIN OF SAlT. Hope this helps

Answer 4

I believe there's a fairly straightforward explanation for the seeming contradiction in the shield's behavior, though it's not one I've ever seen explicitly stated in the comics.

I believe the key is the shield's shape. Remember that the shield is not pure vibranium. It is a vibranium/steel alloy. This means that vibration is not absorbed completely. Instead, it is partially absorbed by the vibranium, and partially redirected throughout the disc.

If you strike the shield dead-center on the star, almost none of that energy will be directed back behind it. Instead, it will radiate out through the metal of the disc and disperse around the rim as sound. That's how Cap can block a direct blow from Thor or the Hulk, or use the shield as a landing pad after jumping from a significant height.

On the other hand, if the shield is struck on the rim, the force is almost 100% redirected around the rim, which is what allows it to ricochet with no apparent loss of momentum when Cap throws it.

Now, if the shield is struck anywhere between a dead-center blow and a rim-shot, most the energy of the blow will be absorbed, but a portion will make it through. Thus, Cap is actually more likely to be knocked off-balance by a glancing blow than by a direct hit.

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