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In my experience as someone who rarely gets up for sunrise, they are not really different. I'm sure there is variation caused by rising vs diving temperature, humidity, cloud patterns caused directly by solar radiation, etc. But, functionally, pretty similar. And no, pollution does not make sunsets prettier. (will explain below)
The main difference is my perception and my ability to predict what comes next. When the sun is setting, I have lots of warning because I can see the sun, obviously. With my spot at the beach, I can watch the sun go all the way down. I know exactly when it disappears and then I watch it a little while longer as the oranges turn even redder. I'm coming from my daytime perception of color and staring at the sun, further delaying my dark adaptation.
Sunrise, on the other hand, is more of a surprise. The sky colors are morphing, but I can't quite tell when the sun will pop up. I'm in relative darkness so my color perception is different. Last one I watched I had my star app open to better predict the sun's appearance and it made it feel a little more like the sunsets I watch at the same spot. As the reds and oranges fade, I continue to normalize the white balance, so to speak, so it seems like a faster event as it approaches normal daylight color.
Pollution. No, those pretty, dramatic sunsets are not caused by pollution. That's a myth you can look up, so here's my observations of why we perceive it as truth. I've spent a week at a time a few times a year for a decade watching just about every sunset on an ocean-like horizon over the rest of my country. The sun is creating a massive, flat rainbow of color. The reds get pulled down towards earth due to refraction in the atmosphere than the blue end. On cloudless evenings, the sky, being a poor reflector, turns a sort of yellow-orange hue while the sun itself is the only thing visibly turning red. That flat rainbow array still exists every time, but it's lost to space as it skims the atmosphere without hitting anything more solid. Think of the classic prism refraction rainbow being projected tangentially onto a basketball. But, if there's some spotty cloud cover between you and 1000 miles west, that rainbow will be blocked and reflected by some clouds instead of flying miles overhead and missing you. Just about all pretty sunset photos have clouds. The solid orange and Orange-yellow portion of the rainbow will be bouncing off the clouds in a patch of sky that still looks blue or pale white. That's where the drama comes from.
I'd also add sunsets blocked at the final stages by very distant cloud banks have made what seem to be the reddest finales I've ever seen, a few minutes after sunset, because the light is still being refracted, reflected, and refracted again from even lower than before. I never pack up and go in for these, unlike most people at the beach. On the opposite end, I don't mind the boring cloudless sunsets because it means I'll have at least a few hours of clear night skies most times. Stargazing is what I'm really there for.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/fact-or-fiction-smog-creates-beautiful-sunsets/
That's a good point I overlooked because it's rare for me to have such polluted skies such as from massive wildfires. Pollution can definitely make the reds deeper, but it comes at the cost of muted colors overall. Human particulate pollution isn't really on the scale of what's needed to have a visible effect like that either, so wildfire smoke is the most common source of visible effects