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Let $\rho$ denote the resolvent of a closed operator and if $\lambda \in \rho(A)$, define $R(\lambda,A) := (\lambda I -A)^{-1}$. If $\mu$ is sufficiently small ($|\lambda-\mu|<\frac{1}{\|R(\lambda,A)\|}$), then the assertions is, that $R(\mu,A)$ can be represented via a power series in the following way: $R(\mu,A) = \sum_{n=0}^{\infty} (\lambda-\mu)^nR(\lambda,A)^{n+1}$, which converges absolutely in $\mathcal{B}(X,[D(A)])$ ($[D(A)]$ means $D(A)$ equipped with the graph norm) and uniformly in $B(\lambda,\frac{\delta}{\|R(\lambda,A)\|})$ for each $\delta \in (0,1)$. proving the uniform convergence I would use Weierstrass' convergence criterion, but actually I don't know how to prove the absolute convergence with respect to the operator topology. Greetings

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    Yes $X$ is a Banach space.2012-12-19

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