Yes, when we want to obtain the equation of motion using Euler-Lagrange equation, we should treat ψ and ψc independent, but ¯ψ and ψc dependent. The reason for this is that we can simply expressed ψc in terms of ¯ψ by
ψc=C¯ψT,
where
C=−iγ2γ0 is the charge conjugation matrix. So
¯ψ and
ψc are the same degree of freedom.
For the derivative of ¯ψψc with respect to ¯ψ,
one should be really careful because ψ is anticommuting. Since
the derivative in Euler-Lagrange equation actually comes from the
variation of Lagrangian, We should start from the variation
δ(¯ψψc)=δ(¯ψC¯ψT)=δ(¯ψiCij¯ψj)=δ(¯ψi)Cij¯ψj+¯ψiCijδ¯ψj=δ(¯ψi)Cij¯ψj−δ(¯ψj)Cij¯ψi,
where I use the anticommutation of the fields to get the minus sign
for the last step. Now notice that
CT=C+=−C. So the last
term is
−δ(¯ψj)Cij¯ψi=δ(¯ψj)Cji¯ψi=δ(¯ψi)Cij¯ψj.
and we get
δ(¯ψψc)=2δ(¯ψ)C¯ψT.
Therefore, the equation of motion from this term is
∂∂¯ψ(¯ψψc)=2C¯ψT=2ψc.
This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2014-05-04 11:36 (UCT), posted by SE-user Louis Yang