Thank you, John. Our first quarter results represent a strong start to 2025, with revenue, gross margin, and adjusted EBITDA all above the high end of our guidance range. The outperformance was primarily driven by another quarter of record defense revenue, which represented more than 63% of total sales in the quarter, up from 49% in the same quarter a year ago. Furthermore, this growth was supported by significant expansion in defense product sales, which grew more than 50% year over year. We are uniquely positioned to drive continued growth in A&D with leading high-power laser technology developed over the past two decades across the entire technology stack from chips to full laser systems, which is supported by our US manufacturing sites. Our products in A&D are also well aligned with many of the Department of Defense's most critical priorities, such as directed energy and laser sensing. During the first quarter, we delivered strong results in each of these critical markets. Directed energy lasers complement traditional kinetic defense by offering a deep magazine, low cost per engagement, and speed of flight delivery. These systems can neutralize a wide range of targets, including drones, rockets, artillery, mortars, and missiles, while also rebalancing the economics of protecting key assets. We continue to make progress on our HEL-TD program. As a reminder, this is a $171 million DoD program to develop a one-megawatt high-energy laser with a completion date expected in 2026. The shipment of critical components towards this program was a significant driver of record defense product revenue in the quarter and is expected to be a substantial contributor to growth through the remainder of the year. Our work on the Army's DEM SHORAD effort, which is programmed to develop a 50-kilowatt high-energy laser for short-range air defense, continues to progress, and we expect to complete our work on this contract in the middle of the year. The success we have achieved to date in key programs reinforces the importance of our vertical integration strategy in the directed energy market, where we leverage our entire technology stack to deliver the highest performing and most cost-effective high-energy lasers. This success has increased interest in our directed energy capabilities both domestically and among our international allies. In the US, we continue to respond to RFPs associated with the President's Golden Dome executive order, which specifically highlights non-kinetic missile defense capabilities as an area for development. With the mandate to build these systems in the United States, we believe we are well-positioned to benefit from this effort over the coming years. Internationally, our work to support the Israeli Iron Beam program is progressing, and we have a growing pipeline of new opportunities that we expect to begin closing in the coming quarters. We have generated revenue at nearly every level of vertical integration in the directed energy market, and we have established ourselves as one of the most comprehensive suppliers to the US government, other prime contractors, and foreign allies. We also continue to gain momentum in our laser sensing markets. Our laser sensing products include missile guidance, proximity detection, range finding, and countermeasures, and have been incorporated into several significant and long-running defense programs, all of which remain key defense priorities under the current administration. Our historical performance on these programs and our early success on multiple classified programs have created many new opportunities for us in this market. Over the last several quarters, we have bid on multiple new programs that have increased both the number of opportunities and the size of our sensing pipeline. In addition, further opportunities in the Golden Dome initiative have emerged and could become a significant contributor to our growth in defense in 2026 and beyond. The solid start to the year combined with our growing pipeline of both directed energy programs and laser sensing opportunities gives me increased confidence that we can grow our revenue in aerospace and defense by at least 25% in 2025. Turning to our commercial markets, overall, our industrial and microfabrication markets remain challenging, though we did see some improvement compared to last quarter. The sequential growth in our commercial markets was driven by an increase in microfabrication sales, as operations at our Thai contract manufacturing partner have stabilized, enabling us to satisfy customer demand. While we are pleased with the stabilization of manufacturing, demand is expected to remain weak through the remainder of the year. Longer term, we remain optimistic about opportunities for growth in metal additive manufacturing, particularly within the aerospace and defense markets, as they look to accelerate prototyping timelines and build resiliency into supply chains with domestic capabilities. Before I turn the call over to Joe to review our first quarter financial results, I'd like to briefly touch on the topic of tariffs. We have spent a significant amount of time over the last couple of months evaluating many different scenarios, and while there continues to be a significant amount of debate and uncertainty around what the tariff landscape will ultimately look like, the impact of these extraordinarily high tariffs on the overall economy, demand from our customers, and material costs for our products, there are a few comments I would like to make. First, we do not expect a significant impact on our business in defense over the long term. Over the short term, however, there may be some margin variability in our defense products as a result of the tariffs placed on some of the important materials used to manufacture these solutions. While the ultimate impact of tariffs on these products is still to be determined, we do not expect them to have a significant negative effect on our demand or long-term profitability of these solutions. Outside of defense, we have shifted the production of our commercial lasers from Shanghai, which we closed in late 2024, to our automated facility in the Pacific Northwest and to our contract manufacturing in Thailand. Our ability to shift manufacturing between the US and Thailand should enable us to better manage tariff-associated risk. In summary, I'm pleased with the strong start to 2025, particularly around the ramp of our defense products, and I'm increasingly confident about the long-term growth in A&D based on our unique leadership across the technology stack for high-power lasers. Let me now turn the call over to Joe to discuss our first quarter financial results.