Thank you, Valter. And welcome, everyone. 2023 was a pivotal year for Sidus as we worked toward the launch of LizzieSat. Earlier this month, we successfully deployed from the SpaceX Transporter-10 Rideshare Mission followed by successful establishment of communications and retrieval of health and status data. LizzieSat-1 is the first of several satellites planned for launch to low earth orbit. We are quickly building our multi mission constellation of 3D printed AI enhanced satellites with two more LizzieSat manifested for launch with SpaceX before the end of this year. The steps we took to prepare since our IPO and through 2023 led us to the successful deployment of LizzieSat-1. The steps we took were both technical and organizational. We built a foundation for the future that included investment in people, processes and technology. We focused on critical areas that contributed to the success of our initial launch and deployment and at the same time to our strategic plan for the next several years. This includes development of simulation, guidance and navigation and flight software, and combined with our hardware innovations establishes a new line of products with flight heritage and experience. Integrating established design and processes related to environmental testing, redundancy of systems and agile development resulted in not only success right out of the gate the first time but also a rapid development capability that will allow us to grow and evolve as the space ecosystem grows and evolves. We streamlined and matured our leadership team and our Board of Directors with a focus on the long term outlook. This means bringing in leadership with the ability to connect, flex and grow as we look to capture more of both government and commercial markets benefiting from LEO, the Moon and Mars programs. 2023 also brought significant upgrades to our LizzieSat, including the addition of an artificial intelligence edge computing solution. This is made possible through the acquisition of Exo-Space in the third quarter of 2023. This acquisition allowed us to add the FeatherEdge AI hardware and software solutions to our product line and also integrate AI into our satellites, giving us a significant edge when capturing data for sale to our customers. AI processing of data using what is called edge computing reduces the time between data collection and decision making, which is critical to time sensitive applications, such as autonomous systems and even remote sensing applications. Outfitting our satellite to function as an edge device with local compute unlocks a host of operational benefits, including reduced transmission time, greater security and lower transmission costs. Specifically, the two key areas that benefit from AI are on satellite data storage and transmission of data back to earth. Our FeatherEdge AI solves both of these potential issues. The proprietary FeatherEdge AI hardware enclosure allows us to continue to rapidly upgrade our memory and processors on future LizzieSats, allowing us to remain state-of-the-art as computer hardware continuously progresses. The FeatherEdge AI software is capable of being updated on orbit as well, which allows our customers to rapidly adapt to changing markets and mission requirements. And additionally, this proprietary software solution uses onboard machine learning to parse out the data that's most valuable to our customers. This dramatically increases the quality of the data that we download to ground stations. So essentially, instead of incurring the delay and cost of moving large volumes of raw data back to earth, the processing can be moved into space, including to the point where actionable insight can be delivered directly to the end user without that raw data even touching earth. While we're extremely proud of our recent successes, it's important not to forget that space is a very difficult environment. Space is hard and executing the right way takes time and experience. Our decade plus of manufacturing space hardware is one of the reasons our first satellite is in the satellite catalog right now. It's important to note that this would not have been possible without the successful coloration with other companies and government agencies during and after the launch. After deploying from the Falcon 9 rocket, we worked with other Transporter-10 riders to share location information and confirm the orbit state of LizzieSat. We saw the space community come together to sort and correlate these tracks for our closely spaced group of vehicles, which is common for rideshare deployments into low earth orbit. And we're truly grateful for this information sharing and the spirit of collaboration with our peers in the space industry. Not only the design, build and test of a satellite very complex but the follow on stages, including launch in early orbit, commissioning phase and mission preparation are all very complicated endeavors. After the successful launch and deployment of our first LizzieSat, we're excited to report that we have achieved the critical milestones related to understanding the health and status of our operational satellites. Now that LizzieSat is in orbit, circling the earth approximately every 95 minutes and providing two way communication, we're looking forward to focusing on data collection, onboard processing and filtering, download of data and sales. We're currently in the commissioning stage, which includes sequential activation and checkout of the spacecraft subsystems, the calibration of payloads, sensors and control systems, which we think will take between 60 to 90 days. Following this, we expect to have the first sensor data and images collected with revenue realized from LizzieSat in later months of this year. Additionally, the heritage of building, launching and operating a commercial satellite of our size greater than 100 kilogram puts Sidus Space in a very small group of companies with the ability to pursue more advanced and long term opportunities with both government and commercial entities. Even though we are successfully operating LizzieSat-1, the experience has resulted in both technical and cost efficiencies that will support our economies of scale and cost reductions in the next few years. As we continue with production for our next few satellites, including the two manifested for the end of this year, we're able to integrate the improvements that we identified as a result of the success of our first LizzieSat. We've become an even more efficient operating unit going forward and we anticipate expanding as an organization with new technologies and new markets. One of the reasons that we can so quickly adapt and integrate recognized solutions and lessons learned is because at Sidus we practice smart vertical integration. We manufacture our own bus and we use selected space proven subcomponents, which allow us to select the best technology to suit the mission objective. LizzieSat-1 is a full production satellite, not just a proof of concept. This is all part of our plan to establish a steady production cadence of our satellites. While most other companies our size have had a gap between their first mission and subsequent missions, LS-2 and LS-3 are in full production and currently on schedule for their manifested launch in Q4 this year. LS-4 is manifested for Q1 2025 and LS-5 and 6 are in the design phase as we are determining technology payloads and enhancements. Once full production cadence is achieved, the expected time to manufacture satellites is 45 days, including printing and assembly. As we look toward the future, we continue to collaborate with our industry partners to ensure the path forward to launch and subsequent revenue is smooth and uninhibited. As small satellite launch options increase with the entrance of dedicated small satellite launchers, we continue to augment our existing rideshare agreement by expanding our options for low cost rides to space to accommodate an accelerated launch cadence. All of our products and services that we offer through our four business units are critical to our future growth and strategy. These capabilities, based in defense, hardware manufacturing, satellite manufacturing and payload integration, space based data solutions and AI products and services allow us to support multiple industries and markets from concept to low earth orbit, the Moon, Mars and beyond. And as the government increasingly seeks to leverage small satellites or include them in architecture planning to augment as needed, we're focused on building a stable business model with complementary dual use to support both government and commercial needs. The ability of our LizzieSat based platform with a purpose to flexibly and rapidly integrate and launch technologies to deliver actionable geospatial data or other sensor solutions is key to creating a catalyst to help accelerate the space ecosystem and the benefits space can provide to all industries and consumers. And I now will hand the call over to Bill to discuss how recent successes impact our business strategy and to discuss our financial highlights.