The new PlayStation 3s without PS2 backwards compatibility are missing the Emotion Engine, a chip Sony designed as the PS2’s CPU. A new patent by Sony bring up the interesting question, what if the PS3’s cell processor could emulate the Emotion Engine? Theoretically, all PlayStation 3s would be able to play PS2 games even if a console didn’t have the proper hardware and according to a recent patent filed by Sony Computer Entertainment in the US, Sony has the code and technology ready to do this.

There are two main ways to emulate hardware. The frist is interpretation is when target code is decoded and converted into a language the host can understand. The other strategy is to decode and recompile programs in the host’s language.

As Siliconera describes it, ”interpretation is like having someone constantly translating English to Japanese for you, non stop, twenty four hours a day wherever you go. Decoding and recompiling is like someone translating a sets of words and putting them in a dictionary you can reference.”

According to these patents Sony has developed a way to translate instructions from an Emotion Engine chip into chunks that can be referenced.

Furthermore, “figure 2 from the patent is a schematic drawing of how the system works. Figure 3A is a drawing of the PlayStation 2’s chipset. Figure 3B is the emotion engine. Figure 4 is where the whole story gets interesting! It’s “an example of a host system based on a cell processor that may be configured to emulate the target system.” The target is figure 3B, the Emotion Engine.”

There is one big reason why Sony would want the PS3’s Cell processor to emulate the PS2’s Emotion Engine that is backwards compatibility. The new PS3 as well as the rumor PS3 Slim might have backwards compatibility. What even more interesting is that a firmware update or the new PlayStation 3 slim might include this new technology.

[Via Siliconera]