Thank you, Matthijs, and good morning, everyone. Our second quarter non-GAAP adjusted gross profit was $108 million or a 47% adjusted gross margin compared to $99 million or a 46% adjusted gross margin in the second quarter of 2022. For the quarter, adjusted gross margins were up sequentially and year-over-year by more than 100 basis points. This outcome was better than our expectations and represent strong execution by our teams to achieve this result. The longest driver - the largest driver for our performance was better production quality achieved through the deployment of the NGS productivity tools in our factories. The 47% gross margin puts us on a solid track to achieving our full year goal of expanding gross margins by 100 basis points. Moving on to operating expenses. R&D expenses were roughly $23 million or approximately 10% of sales. First quarter SG&A expenses were $42 million or roughly 18% of sales and overall operating expenses as a percent of sales were flat sequentially and flat year-over-year in the quarter. Adjusted EBITDA was approximately $52 million in the second quarter of 2023 or 22.5% adjusted EBITDA margin versus $45 million in the prior year. On the tax front, our non-GAAP tax rate for the second quarter of 2023 was 18%. This differed from the statutory rate due to jurisdictional mix of income. Our non-GAAP adjusted earnings per share was $0.80 in the quarter compared to $0.78 in the second quarter of 2022, while adjusted EBITDA grew double digits, EPS continued to be muted solely to the higher interest expense from the jump in worldwide interest rates. Second quarter cash flow was approximately $23 million, up 25% versus the prior year. We expect cash flows to continue to improve through the rest of the year as we gradually bring down our inventory to more historical levels and continue to drive good profitability. We ended the quarter with gross debt of $413 million, and our gross leverage ratio was 2.1x. Our net debt was $321 million, putting the company in a great position to fund further acquisitions. I'll now turn to an update for the performance of our operating segments. First, in the Precision Medicine & Manufacturing segment, the second quarter of 2023, revenue grew 7% year-over-year. This segment continues to experience strong customer demand in medical applications, especially an uptick in next-generation DNA sequencing. The book-to-bill in this segment was 8.84% in the second quarter, which reflects the normalization of lead times as customers adjusted their level of backlog coverage to pre-pandemic levels as expected. Within precision medicine and manufacturing, new product revenue stayed strong at greater than 20% of sales in the second quarter. Our sales team continues to win excellent new business and attracting high-growth medical and industrial applications, winning new content, winning new customers and winning new applications. Design wins in these segments in the quarter were down year-over-year, but this was really driven by timing and difficult comparisons, particularly around the 2022 wins in Laser Quantum branded products. For the full year, we expect solid design win growth year-over-year. The Precision Medicine and Manufacturing segment adjusted gross margin was 51% in the quarter, which was up 500 basis points year-over-year. This is a great outcome and reflects the efforts and successes this team is having and deploying the Novanta growth system deep into the organization and overcoming some of the operational supply chain challenges they experienced in the prior year. Turning to Robotics and Automation segment. This segment experienced a revenue decline of 11% year-over-year in the quarter. This was in line with our expectations and prior guidance. The decline continues to be mainly driven by a steep year-over-year decline in microelectronics applications, particularly our PCP mechanical viable drilling applications, which declined over 70%. And now at an immaterial level of sales for the company. This decline in PCBA drilling is causing a sales growth headwind for the overall Novanta of approximately 300 to 400 basis points for the full year, which is slightly worse than we previously estimated. In addition, as Matthijs mentioned, the segment started to see an impact from a short-term pause in the sales of industrial robotics caused by weak macro conditions in China, which is currently the largest market in the world for industrial robotics. This downturn is more pronounced in the third and fourth quarters and reflected in the guidance for the second half. The overall book-to-bill ratio in this segment was 0.80, again driven by the microelectronics decline and exposure. Microelectronics experienced a negligible level of bookings in the quarter. New product revenue was roughly 10% of total sales for the segment in the quarter. As a reminder, this ratio is lower than 2022 because this metric now includes new product sales from our ATI business line, which has low new products in its revenue and therefore, is having a dampening effect on the overall segment ratio. However, as Matthijs spoke to earlier, this quarter, ATI launched two new products, the Series A tool changer and next-generation force torque sensors, both of which position it to capture new growth opportunities in medical robotics and industrial robotic markets. Adjusted gross margin for the Robotics and Automation segment came in at about 51%, which was roughly flat year-over-year and up sequentially by 300 basis points. Again, we're proud of the progress our teams are making by adopting the Novanta Growth System to drive strong margin performance - to accomplish gross margin expansion, considering the sharp declines in microelectronics is truly a testament to NGS. Finally, our Medical Solutions segment saw reported revenue growth of 27% year-over-year, which was stronger than our expectations. Growth in this segment continues to be driven by strength in elective surgical procedures as well as our JADAK business line, where the business continues to perform well now that supply chain challenges have been mitigated. The Medical Solutions segment saw a book-to-bill of 1.09 in the second quarter, with bookings up 13% sequentially and 5% year-over-year, further indicating the building demand we are seeing in this end market. The vitality in this segment reduced versus prior year. As we mentioned on our last call, this is largely driven by our first-generation smoke evacuation insufflator products reaching their 4-year milestone. And so we are no longer tracking it as part of our official Vitality Index. As a result, this segment has a Vitality Index in the mid-teens year-to-date, which was in line with our expectations. We expect this metric to stay at this level for 2023, but to increase thereafter as we launch our second-generation smoke evacuation insufflator and endoscopic pumps in 2024 and in 2025. Design win activity in this segment grew single digits in the second quarter year-over-year on the strength of some exciting design wins in our integrated operating room technology products. Overall, our business units performed at or above our expectations and are performing in a manner that helps to mitigate the volatility seen in industrial capital spending, microelectronics and macroeconomic conditions, particularly in China. Our strategy of using multiple business units in multiple application areas focused on secular growth trends has diversified out significant volatility, allowing us to continue to deliver solid results in a challenging environment. Turning now to guidance. As Matthijs mentioned, we continue to see ordering behavior from our customers returning to historical patterns as our product lead times drop. We are seeing a steady improvement in lead times everywhere in the portfolio. And in some cases, our current lead times are already matching historical levels. This will result in a book-to-bill ratio continue to be below one in the back half of the year as discussed in our prior calls. From an end market perspective, we expect demand in our medical end markets to remain strong and we see solid growth coming from both our medical capital equipment and our medical consumable sales as well as our IBD and other life science customers. Year-over-year growth in the second half of the year was low mainly due to accelerated past due backlog reduction that happened in the second quarter and more difficult comparisons in the second half of the year. However, we continue to see strong customer activities in medical end markets, particularly around new product launches across our portfolio. These projects remain on track and as a consequence, our sales funnel look stronger through 2024 and beyond. In our advanced industrial end market, we expect the downturn in microelectronics and a pause in industrial robotics due to the China economic environment to last through the remainder of the year. For China in July, we've seen a sharp decrease in manufacturing production as measured by the PMI index with an a company's sharp decline in export orders, which is leading to further weakening of demand in the second half. Microelectronics sales are expected to fall to approximately 7% of revenue by year-end, resulting in a 300 to 400 basis point headwind for the full year sales. And sales to China are expected to fall to approximately 8% of revenue by year-end. However, we expect the remainder of our industrial applications to be resilient in the back half of the year, and we continue to have solid backlog coverage in these areas. We continue to see robotics and automation investments, particularly in the U.S. and Europe, being made to support business resiliency, mitigate labor shortages and support investments in green energy and electric vehicles. We also continue to expect our disciplined focus on secular growth applications, a broader focus on medical markets and our effort to accelerate new product introductions to allow Novanta to weather a more uncertain macroeconomic environment. Based on this environment, we are narrowing the full year guidance, which we provided back in March, in addition to providing an update to our third quarter expectations. Starting with revenue guidance for the third quarter of 2023. As we stand here today, we expect GAAP revenue in the range of $221 million to $224 million, which represents reported revenue growth roughly flat on a year-over-year basis. If excluded the impact of microelectronics end market, our revenue growth in the third quarter would be approximately 4% year-over-year. The third quarter will sequentially down from the second quarter, in part due to the accelerated shipments we made in the second quarter helped bring down our past due backlog and better satisfy our customers and in part by a pause in industrial robotic spending in China, which is expected to recover in 2024. On the segment level, in the third quarter, we expect Precision Medicine and Manufacturing segment to grow revenue in the 6% to 8% range on a year-over-year basis. Customer demand remains resilient in this segment, and we continue growth in multiple medical and industrial applications, including DNA sequencing, micromachining and laser-based material processing. Our Robotics and Automation segment is expected to be down sequentially high single digits and down approximately 15% year-over-year. The year-over-year decline is driven by the downturn in the microelectronics market and the pause in industrial robotic spending in China due to the local dynamics there. Finally, our Medical Solutions segment is expected to demonstrate year-over-year revenue growth in the range of 8% to 10% in the third quarter. While we are seeing more difficult comparisons, growth in our applications remain strong and building, thanks to the expected new product launches scheduled for 2024. For the full year of 2023, we expect GAAP revenue in the range of $82 million to $92 million. This would represent mid-single-digit reported growth for the full year. This reflects our ongoing strength in medical markets, moderation in some industrial end markets, but offset by weakness in microelectronics as well as in China in the second half of the year. Moving on to overall Novanta's gross margin, we expect gross margin in the third quarter to be approximately 46.5 to 47.5%, which is up year-over-year and be roughly flat sequentially. Precision Medicine and Manufacturing segment gross margin is expected to increase moderately from the second quarter, whereas robotics and automation and Medical Solutions segments are expected to be flat sequentially. In the full year of 2023, we expect adjusted gross margins to be approximately 46.5% to 47%. We believe our team's efforts to use the Novanta growth system will help us sustain and expand our gross margins as we head into the remainder of the year. Turning to R&D and SG&A expenses. They are expected to be approximately $65 million to $66 million in the third quarter. The increase in cost year-over-year is driven by labor cost increases and further investments in innovation, particular investments in our Medical Solutions segment tied to the aforementioned products and some further investments in our commercial engine. Depreciation expense, which was about $4 million in the second quarter, will be the same in the third quarter. Stock compensation expense, which was just below $6 million in the second quarter will be slightly above $6 million in the third quarter. For adjusted EBITDA in the third quarter of 2023, we expect a range of $48 million to $51 million. For the full year of 2023, the adjusted EBITDA, we expect a range of $196 million to $204 million. This reflects our confidence that still show strong profit performance and cost management despite the macroeconomic conditions. Interest expense, which was nearly $7 million in the second quarter is expected to be over $7 million in the third quarter of 2023, driven by the continued rise in interest rates. We continue to focus on paying down debt to mitigate the impact of rising rates. We expect our non-GAAP tax rate to be around 18% in the third quarter of 2023, similar to the second quarter and roughly the same as the prior year. Diluted weighted average shares outstanding will be approximately 36 million shares. For adjusted diluted earnings per share, we expect a range of $0.70 to $0.77 in the third quarter. For the full year of 2023, adjusted diluted earnings per share, we now expect a range of $2.96 to $3.15. This reflects our adjusted EBITDA outlook, but also an expectation of higher interest rates will continue through the end of the year. Finally, we expect cash flow to improve sequentially in the third quarter as we continue to focus our efforts on bringing down our inventory levels. In addition, we continue to invest in two significant manufacturing facility expansion projects, including our new Manchester U.K. optical subsystem manufacturing facility and our new Czech Republic medical consumable manufacturing facility. These investments are on track for the year, and the business case for making these investments continues to strengthen. As always, the guidance does not assume any significant changes to foreign exchange rates. In summary, Novanta's performance in the second quarter of 2023 was excellent. We beat our own expectations for sales growth, margin expansion and profit performance. We saw tremendous growth in our medical end markets, which more than offset a known headwind in microelectronics. This dynamic has yet another testament to the diversification and resiliency of our business portfolio. Our teams continue to deliver great results, helping the company work through a difficult operating environment while still winning new customer platforms and progressing our innovation pipeline. Despite a more challenging macroeconomic environment, particularly in China and a higher interest rate environment, we are confident in our ability to deliver our updated outlook for full year 2023, and we see our sales growth prospects remaining strong well past this year and on the back of exciting new product launches starting later this year and our exposure to high-growth end markets in both medical and advanced industrial applications. We remain grateful for the outstanding performance of our employees and their tireless efforts to help us be successful in this dynamic environment. We look forward to continuing to deliver on our commitments and our employees, our customers and our shareholders. This concludes the prepared remarks. We'll now open the call up for questions.