This is perhaps a trivial question, but I've asked a few colleagues and they couldn't answer. For a given abelian group $M$, is it possible to have several different actions of the ring of $p$-adic numbers $\mathbb{Z}_p$? Or is it necessarily unique when it exists?
If the action were continuous of some sort then it would have to be unique: integers are dense in $\mathbb{Z}_p$, and for $n \in \mathbb{Z}$ one has $n \cdot x = x + \dots + x$ ($n$ times) so the action (if it exists) cannot be changed. But what if there are no assumptions about continuity?
(To be completely precise: by an action, I just mean a bilinear map $\mathbb{Z}_p \otimes_{\mathbb{Z}} M \to M$ satisfying $a \cdot (b \cdot m) = ab \cdot m$.)