Good morning and thank you for joining us for our fourth quarter and full year 2024 results earnings call. Beginning on Slide Number 3 we exited the year on a solid note with revenues for the fourth quarter at $252 million and earnings per diluted share of $1.54. Revenue was slightly better and our expectations and strong demand for our off the market CS&I sales partially offset the anticipated sequential declines in system sales. This strength in our CS&I business was the primary target behind our better than expected margins and EPS in the quarter. Within our system sales, a sequential decline in Power and Image Sensors was offset by an improvement in General Mature and Memory sales. Our backlog declined during the quarter, but remained at healthy levels. We also saw booking stabilized, which came in flat on a sequential basis. Turning to Slide 4, in the quarter as well as for the full year, sales in mature node applications remained a lion's share of our business in particular, Power and General Mature. Now let me review shipped systems revenue by end market, and I will begin with mature nodes on Slide 5. Revenues from our power market was 51% of our mix down sequentially from 57% in Q3 2024. Shipments of Silicon Carbide applications moderated slightly in the fourth quarter. However, on a full year 2024 basis, our system sales of Silicon Carbide grew approximately 6% year-over-year. Over the past several years, Axcelis has established itself as a market and technology leader in ion implantation for Silicon Carbide, one of the defining process steps in device manufacturing. We were first identified as emerging opportunity several years ago, and quickly leveraged our Purion platform to drive necessary innovation. This included the development of a differentiated medium current implanter, followed by an extension of capabilities to our high energy tools. Close collaboration of customers to understand their production needs, and finally we launched our high current implanter, optimized the Silicon Carbide. This will translate into our system shipments with silicon carbide growing from approximately $8 million in 2020 to over $300 million in 2024. And while we expect revenue from Silicon Carbides decline sequentially in the first quarter of 2025 as customers owned to go a digestion period, the fundamental long-term drivers remain intact as we expect adoption of Silicon Carbide to continue to increase particularly as costs come down and new applications become economically viable. A case in point, we expect the EV industries transition from 400 volts to 800 volts’ architecture to greatly improve charging times and this will require Silicon Carbide. We're also closely monitoring power applications in the data center where the demand for energy is rising rapidly and Silicon Carbides can be used to deliver more power more efficiently. But our engagement with customers is not just confined to addressing their capacity needs. We are deeply embedded with customers on their technology road maps, which include the transition from 150 millimeters to 200 millimeters, our weightless size, the transition from planar to trench MOSFETs, the transition from trench to superjunction, and some customers are even exploring weightless switching applications to improve yield and lower cost. In all of these cases, excellence is a key enabler and we believe the need for higher performance devices with higher yield and lower cost will only unlock new opportunities for Silicon Carbide in power applications. We believe we're in the early stages of the Silicon Carbide market growth. Turning to silicon IGBT, systems sales declined in the fourth quarter, and we anticipate this market to continue to soften in 2025 as our customers continue to work on managing capacity and with the slow and expected industrial auto recovery. In General Mature revenue increased sequentially in the fourth quarter led by investments in China, or other regions remained muted. As a reminder, General Mature represents a broad array of semiconductor applications required at 28 nanometer process no or above. This includes RS, analog macro controllers, and other semiconductor applications. We continue to monitor key end markets, mainly auto, industrial, and consumer, which generally are drivers of our General Mature segment. Given recent industry commentary of a slow and expected recovery in the auto and industrial market, along with an anticipated digestion of mature node capacity in China, we expect our General Mature revenue to decline sequentially in the first quarter. Over the long-term, as inventory levels normalize and demand recovery in key end markets, we anticipate a General Mature business to benefit accordingly, as ion implant intensity is particularly high for process nodes of 28 millimeters and above. Turning to Image Sensors, as we anticipated, revenue moderates in the fourth quarter, following a large customer order in China in the third quarter. Image sensor production will continue to rely a large part of smart phones volumes, but also to a lesser extent on auto, as we see increased camera content in autos. As we think about the first quarter, we expect image sensor revenue to be flattish on a sequential basis. Turning to Slide 6, in Advanced Logic, we shipped the system to a new Advanced Logic customer in the fourth quarter, following a previous announced order received in the second quarter, and we have discussions for a follow-on order. We continue to work actively with customers, as well as with our leading European Advanced Logic research center in understanding next generation Advanced Logic applications for ion implantation. Growing footprint within the Advanced Logic market is a strategic goal, which is a multi-year initiative, and we are still in the relatively early stages. Moving to memory, as we anticipated, we saw a sequential improvement in sales in memory market, specifically with DRAM. Looking ahead to the first quarter, we expect sales in memory to be relatively consistent on a sequential basis, entirely in DRAM. In NAND, we believe customers have ample capacity given current demand trends, and expect this to remain the case in 2025. As we think about our memory business over the long-term, we are quite excited about the opportunity, both in DRAM and NAND, given the following drivers. One, growth in AI and its structural impact on high bandwidth memory, which is absorbing DRAM capacity. In fact, not only are AI survey unit volumes expected to grow significantly, but HBM content for service also expects to grow, enabling a multiplier effect on HBM capacity. Two, AI's impact on new data creation, particularly with inference whereby new data sets need to be manipulated and stored, which we believe will be a tailwind for DRAM and NAND. Three, widening memory and storage content in smartphones, servers, and PCs, as devices need to process and store more data. And four, device volume growth resulted with improved macro and potential refresh cycles. We believe that the confluence of these catalysts translate into attractive long-term market for Axcelis. And while a market recovery is instrumental to any growth in our memory business, we are not standing still with folks on penetrating new customer opportunities within memory where historically we had a low share, and I'm pleased to say we've had some initial progress in this regard. Turning to Slide 7, as we look back on 2024, I am proud of how our team executed amidst the dynamic demand environment. For four years we saw a continued growth in sales to Silicon Carbide or Silicon IGBTs softened considerably. In memory, demand remains soft as customers navigating through lower utilizations. Despite this, we spoke to what we can control, and this included working close with our customers to enable their technology production rosemests [ph], placing evaluation units in the field, seeding new opportunities, continuing to invest in our R&D to maintain our robust pace of innovation, and maintaining strong margins due to favorable mix and cost control. In fact, despite a year-over-year decline in revenue, we grew our gross margins by more than a 100 basis points. On Slide 8, let me now discuss some of our initial perspectives on 2025. We anticipate overall revenue in 2025 to decline on a year-over-year basis. As we think about the transverse segment, we expect a digestion of capacity in the Power and General Mature markets primarily in China. In memory, we expect year-over-year growth in 2025, specifically targets DRAM investments while NAND remains muted. And we expect modest revenue from our initiatives in Advanced Logic, consistent with our expectations of being in the early stages of a multi-year growth effort. In summary, while the near-term demand backdrop is muted, the fundamental long-term drivers of our business remains intact. Namely, long-term secular growth in Power, particularly Silicon Carbide, which we believe will continue to proliferate with an existing and new applications given the world's sensational demand of more power and greater efficiency. Market recovery and memory in General Mature, share gain in Advanced Logic, and geographically expansion into Japan, which is a sizable market for ion implantation and where we have relatively low penetration. As a result, we are taking actions to date to increase our technology engagement with customers to help accelerate their roadmaps. On that note, before I hand over to Jamie, as you can see in Slide 9, I am particularly proud of the Axcelis team and the recognition we've received from customers in 2024. We received 22 customer awards covering overall supplier excellence to support safety, health, and others and this represents a significant increase compared to 2023. The core of our culture at Axcelis is customer first, then company and then self. And this is a shining endorsement of how we operate. With that, let me turn the call over to Jamie for a closer look at our results and outlook. Jamie?