The fragmentation of gas to form stars in molecular clouds is intrinsically
linked to the turbulence within them. These internal motions are set at the
birth of the cloud and may vary with galactic environment and as the cloud
evolves. In this paper, we introduce a new suite of 15 high-resolution
molecular cloud simulations using the moving mesh code AREPO, to investigate
the role of different decaying turbulent modes (mixed, compressive and
solenoidal) and Virial ratios on the evolution of a 104Mββ
molecular cloud. We find that diffuse regions maintain a strong relic of the
initial turbulent mode, whereas the initial gravitational potential dominates
dense regions. Solenoidal seeded models thus give rise to a diffuse cloud with
filament-like morphology, and an excess of brown dwarf mass fragments.
Compressive seeded models have an early onset of star-formation, cluster-like
morphologies and a higher accretion rate, along with overbound clouds, compared
to other simulations. Filaments identified using DisPerSE, and analyzed through
a new Python toolkit we develop and make publicly available with this work
called FIESTA, show no clear trend in lengths, masses and densities between
initial turbulent modes. Overbound clouds, however, produce more filaments and
thus have more mass in filaments. The hubs formed by converging filaments are
found to favour star-formation, with surprisingly similar mass distributions
independent of the number of filaments connecting the hub.Comment: 19 pages, 15 figure