What is the geometrical meaning of the common value in the law of sines, $\frac{\sin A}{\sinh a} = \frac{\sin B}{\sinh b} = \frac{\sin C}{\sinh c}$ in hyperbolic geometry? I know the meaning of this value only in Euclidean and spherical geometry.
EDIT, Will Jagy. The OP is looking for some fourth fairly natural real number that can be calculated from a triangle, that gives the same answer as the common value in the Law of Sines. The original question is at https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/69345/the-law-of-sines-in-hyperbolic-geometry
where I suggested that there was no easy interpretation for the common value in the Law of Sines. Evidently in spherical geometry there is some ratio of volumes associated with the specific triangle. – Will Jagy Oct 04 '11 at 20:24