Try comparing the two in Photoshop by layering and selecting Difference as the Blend mode. This does show differences, which I can post if you are willing for me to do so. I also noticed that you posted them in Adobe RGB, which some monitors may not represent properly.
There has been much discussion amongst Fuji users about Adobe's processing of X-Trans files. Many have switched to Capture One or Iridient. For example, here is a discussion on an official Photoshop website.
https://feedback.photoshop.com/conversations/lightroom-classic/camera-rawlightroom-classic-fuji-xtrans-support/5f5f45684b561a3d424a11b0Adobe itself recognises that there are issues with its X-Trans processing, and when releasing Enhance Details stated it could "resolve issues that some customers reported with their Fujifilm X-Trans based cameras".
A problem with Enhance Details is that it creates a large additional dng file, in the case of a Fuji file I tested this was 100MB greater than the original raf (which was, of course, retained). So it is not something one would want to use for every image; and I don't want to have to think about whether an image would benefit from it before deciding on the processing workflow.
Photo Ninja and Iridient Developer do a good job on X-Trans files. Iridient also created X-Transformer specifically for the purpose of demosaicing X-Trans files and creating dngs for further processing in LR.
Having said all that, I prefer to leave scientific comparisons to the experts.