We develop the nonadiabatic polaron theory of superconductivity of
MxC60 taking into account the polaron band narrowing and realistic
electron-phonon and Coulomb interactions. We argue that the crossover from the
BCS weak-coupling superconductivity to the strong-coupling polaronic and
bipolaronic superconductivity occurs at the BCS coupling constant λ∼1 independent of the adiabatic ratio, and there is nothing ``beyond'' Migdal's
theorem except small polarons for any realistic electron-phonon interaction. By
the use of the polaronic-type function and the ``exact'' diagonalization in the
truncated Hilbert space of vibrons (``phonons'') we calculate the ground state
energy and the electron spectral density of the C60− molecule. This
allows us to describe the photoemission spectrum of C60− in a wide
energy region and determine the electron-phonon interaction. The strongest
coupling is found with the high-frequency pinch Ag2 mode and with the
Frenkel exciton. We clarify the crucial role of high-frequency bosonic
excitations in doped fullerenes which reduce the bare bandwidth and the Coulomb
repulsion allowing the intermediate and low-frequency phonons to couple two
small polarons in a Cooper pair. The Eliashberg-type equations are solved for
low-frequency phonons. The value of the superconducting Tc, its pressure
dependence and the isotope effect are found to be in a remarkable agreement
with the available experimental data.Comment: 20 pages, Latex, 4 figures available upon reques