In my region, we have many miles to the Cascade Mountain Range at sunrise, but at sunset the closer Coast Range and even-closer Tualatin Mountain range cause the setting sun to be blocked off by close mountains (Coast Range) or extremely close mountains (Tualatins), so the sun rays do not travel through much atmosphere at sunset time, and also there can often be quite a bit of marine layer clouds/rain over the Pacific Ocean. At sunrise however, the sun's rays crest the Cascade Range some many miles to the east,and come through clear, mostly un-polluted mountain-zone atmosphere. So...in my particular region, Oregon's Willamette Valley, we have a very distant eastern mountain range, and a relatively close set of western mountains. Sunrise and sunsets here are very different.
If one drives to the Oregon Coast, it's possible to watch a sunset that comes through nothing but a tiny bit of ocean breeze-borne air; this is hugely different than watching a sunrise where the sun peeks over Mount Hood many miles to the east, and the light slants through populated areas, with agricultural particulates, or forest fire smoke in the fire season, etc.. Last summer we had terrible forest fires east of Portland, and the sun at sunrise was a brilliant fiery RED BALL for weeks on end.