I suppose you mean

Recall that

which converges everywhere. Then by substitution,

which also converges everywhere (and we can confirm this via the ratio test, for instance).
a. Differentiating the Taylor series gives

(starting at
because the summand is 0 when
)
b. Naturally, the differentiated series represents

To see this, recalling the series for
, we know

Multiplying by
gives

and from here,


c. This series also converges everywhere. By the ratio test, the series converges if

The limit is 0, so any choice of
satisfies the convergence condition.