Good morning, and thank you for joining us for our third quarter 2025 earnings call. Beginning on Slide 4, we generated solid results in the third quarter with revenue of $214 million and non-GAAP earnings per diluted share of $1.21, both exceeding our outlook. We delivered record CS&I revenue as well as slightly better-than-expected system revenue, which drove the better-than-expected profitability. Bookings in the third quarter declined on a sequential basis, primarily led by a softer power and general mature bookings, which were partially offset by an improvement in memory. While bookings fluctuate from quarter-to-quarter, based on recent encouraging quoting activity and our conversations with customers on their build plans, we anticipate bookings to improve sequentially in the fourth quarter. Before I provide more detail on the trends we are seeing by Market segment, I'd like to touch on our recent transaction announcement. On October 1, we announced that Axcelis and Veeco had agreed to merge to create what we believe will be a leading semiconductor equipment company. We have long admired Veeco's history of innovation and its track record of delivering breakthrough products, and this merger is expected to position the combined company as a key beneficiary and critical enabler of secular tailwinds, including AI and electrification. I want to take this opportunity to recap a few points that we made when we announced this deal and what is highly compelling opportunity for both companies. Starting with cross-sell synergy, we believe each company can open doors for the other. One such example is with Axcelis implant and Veeco's laser annealing solutions, which are adjacent steps and reside in the same diffusion module in the fab. In addition, our combined technical depth is expected to enable us to optimize technology advancements. An example of this is our plan to leverage our deep ion source and component expertise to enhance Veeco's ion beam deposition capabilities and vice versa. Second, from a market perspective, we are strong in Silicon Carbide, while Veeco has an exciting opportunity in MOCVD for GaN on silicon. We believe this combined presence will allow us to be a comprehensive solution provider to the compound semiconductor market, which is becoming increasingly relevant due to electrification, including the growing need for greater power efficiency driven in part by the rise in AI. In addition, we believe Veeco's MOCVD business has an opportunity in microLED as well as an indium phosphide opportunity for optical communication products, which is an emerging data center application. Moreover, we see opportunities stemming from our strength in memory and mature foundry logic, which we believe are complemented very well by Veeco's strength in advanced foundry logic and advanced packaging, stretching across annealing, ion beam deposition, wet processing and lithography solutions. It's also worth noting that the combined company is expected to be better equipped to better serve our customers through access to an expanded installed base supported by stronger aftermarket services. Finally, the all-stock nature of this transaction is expected to position the combined company to have a resilient operating profile and balance sheet post closing, which we believe allows us to invest in our business to drive organic growth as well as return capital to shareholders. In short, by bringing our 2 companies together, we believe we are building a leading semiconductor equipment company with the capabilities, resources and financial foundation to drive sustainable growth and value creation for shareholders and drive meaningful benefits for all our stakeholders. With that, let me now turn back to our Q3 results and the trends we're seeing by market category. Turning to Slide 6. In the quarter, sales to mature node applications comprised almost the entirety of our system shipments, in particular, power and general mature. Now on Slide 7, let me review our trends by end market. Within our Power business, shipments to Silicon Carbide applications grew nicely on a sequential basis. Consistent with our commentary heading into 2025, customers continue to digest the capacity that has been put in place over the past few years. However, in China, multiple customers continue to build out capacity as they strive to address growing demand in the local market, while customers outside of China are making select investments into next-generation technology such as trench and super junction. Moreover, in the quarter, we shipped several tools to multiple customers that have only just begun to develop their Silicon Carbide capability. We believe this is yet another validation of the long-term secular growth opportunity in Silicon Carbide and customers recognize the world's need for more efficient power delivery will continue to accelerate. As the cost of Silicon Carbide continues to decline, we anticipate its adoption in an expanding array of applications will continue to grow, ultimately requiring more investments in technology and capacity. As we've noted in the past, Axcelis is a market and technology leader in high-energy ion implantation, which is becoming increasingly critical for next-generation Silicon Carbide devices. In August, we announced a joint development program with GE Aerospace to pursue production-worthy high-voltage Silicon Carbide devices utilizing our Purion XEmax system, which is our highest energy implanter delivering up to 15 million electron volts in an IMV. We are proud to partner with GE Aerospace on this exciting initiative. In September, we made multiple new product announcements, including our new Purion Power Plus series at the annual ICSCRM Conference, which was held in Korea. The platform is designed to enable improved device performance and increased productivity for next-generation power devices. While the majority of the platform is targeted to the Silicon Carbide market, there are also applications for silicon and gallium nitride. Axcelis has a proven track record of collaborating with customers to develop innovative solutions, and this product announcement is no different. We also have received positive customer feedback about our new high-energy channeling capability and MUSIC, our multistep implant chain capability, which reduces the overhead of wafer transfer time during the implant process, enabling our customers to have increased output with less downtime between recipes. This capability is on tools, we've already placed in the field with our leading customers. And as I said, we are receiving positive feedback. Additionally, Axcelis announced the launch of the GSD Ovation ES, a high current multi-wafer ion implanter targeted specifically for engineered substrates. Turning back to the near-term demand environment in Silicon Carbide, we continue to see select areas of capacity and technology investment, and we expect revenue from Silicon Carbide to fluctuate from quarter-to-quarter with fourth quarter expected to be down slightly on a sequential basis. In our other Power Market segment, ship system revenue also grew on a sequential basis, primarily due to shipments to customers in Japan and Europe. In General Mature, revenue declined on a sequential basis as customers continue to manage their capacity investments given the current demand environment in auto, industrial and consumer electronics. Broadly speaking, we are seeing an improvement in utilization rates. However, this varies by customer and can even vary by fab location within each customer. In fact, we are seeing some signs of improvement in utilization rates with our image sensor customers as camera content on autos continues to rise and smartphones continue to be a strong long-term demand driver. Image sensors require high energy ion implantation, and we are well positioned to address this market as our customers resume capacity build-out investments. In the third quarter, we also shipped an XEmax evaluation unit for a 300-millimeter power management IC application. This is noteworthy because our XEmax was developed for the image sensor market, and yet we are seeing interest in additional applications where this technology can be deployed, namely power. Turning to Slide 8. In Advanced Logic, we continue to actively target next-generation ion implantation applications across multiple customers. In the quarter, we generated revenue from a previously booked system with an existing customer. Moving to Memory. Revenue remained muted in the third quarter. However, we expect sequential increase in the revenue in the fourth quarter as customers expand capacity to address growing demand for AI-related applications. While it is too early for us to predict 2026, given our conversations with customers on the capacity plans, we anticipate our sales to memory market to grow next year, led by increased DRAM and HBM investments. In NAND, customers remain focused on scaling to higher layer counts, which requires deposition and etch trimer-based upgrades, but not incremental ion implant capacity. As a result, we continue to expect demand for NAND applications to remain muted in the near term. However, we are encouraged with some initial signs of improvement in the NAND bit demand and pricing, and we are ready to service market once customers resume capacity additions. On Slide 9, let me wrap up my thoughts prior to handing the call over to Jamie. We are navigating the current cyclical digestion period across our markets exceptionally well, remaining aggressive in our product development and customer engagement while staying disciplined on cost control. As referenced earlier, we are seeing interest in new applications for our high solutions while also executing on our strategy to drive greater adoption of our high current portfolio. Meanwhile, our CS&I business continues to benefit from our focused aftermarket strategy and growing installed base. It remains a foundational part of our company's profitability and cash flow profile and integral to the value proposition we offer our customers. Adding all this up, despite a moderation of demand in our markets in 2025, we have a strong base of profitability and cash flow, which we believe provides a solid platform for Axcelis to execute on our long-term growth opportunities. With that, let me turn the call over to Jamie for a closer look at our results and outlook. Jamie?