Through the years numerous attempts have been made to connect the
phenomenology and physics of mass accretion onto stellar-mass and super-massive
black holes in a scale-invariant fashion. In this paper, we explore this
connection at the radiatively-efficient (and non-jetted) end of accretion modes
by comparing the relationship between the luminosity of the accretion disk and
corona in the two source classes. We analyse 458 RXTE-PCA archival observations
of the X-ray binary (XRB) GX339-4 focusing on the soft and soft-intermediate
states, which have been suggested to be analogous to radiatively efficient AGN.
The observed scatter in the $\log L_{disk}-\log L_{corona}$ relationship of
GX339-4 is high ($\sim0.43\,$dex) and significantly larger than in a
representative sample of radiatively-efficient, non- or weakly-jetted AGN
($\sim0.30\,$dex). On the face of it, this would appear contrary to the
hypothesis that the systems simply scale with mass. On the other hand we also
find that GX339-4 and our AGN sample show different $\dot{m}$ and $\Gamma$
distributions, with the latter being broader in GX339-4 (dispersion of
$\sim0.16$ cf. $\sim0.08$ for AGN). GX339-4 also shows an overall softer slope,
with mean $\sim2.20$ as opposed to $\sim2.07$ for the AGN sample. Remarkably,
once similarly broad $\Gamma$ and $\dot{m}$ distributions are selected, the AGN
sample overlaps nicely with GX339-4 observations in the mass-normalised $\log
L_{disk}-\log L_{corona}$ plane, with a scatter of $\sim0.30-0.33\,$dex. This
indicates that a mass-scaling of properties might hold after all, with our
results being consistent with the disk-corona systems in AGN and XRBs
exhibiting the same physical processes, albeit under different conditions for
instance in terms of temperature, optical depth and/or electron energy
distribution in the corona, heating-cooling balance, coronal geometry and/or
black hole spin.