Thank you, Kathy, and good morning, everyone. As you just heard from Kathy, we delivered another strong quarter of financial performance. Let's begin on Slide four, which shows our top-line results for the quarter. Third-quarter sales were $10.4 billion, up 4% compared to the prior year. And up 5% on an organic basis. We continue to expect further acceleration in Q4 with all segments returning to growth, both sequentially and on a year-over-year comparison. Aeronautics generated third-quarter sales of $3.1 billion, up 6% compared to the prior year. Higher sales were driven by the ramp on Takimo and higher volume on the F-35 program. Partially offset by lower sales on FA-18 as the program winds down. Sales at DS were exceptionally strong in Q3, accelerating to nearly $2.1 billion. Sales were higher across the DS portfolio, including on ammunition and weapons programs, IBCS, and Sentinel. In total, DS sales grew by 14% compared to Q3 of last year, and by 19% organically. Mission Systems continues to deliver unmatched technological innovation at a rapid rate. This is reflected by further growth on restricted microelectronic programs in Q3 which led the segment to another quarter of double-digit sales growth. Sales were also higher at Marine Systems and on international programs, building on the strong momentum from the first half of the year. And at Space Systems, Q3 sales grew on a sequential basis again this quarter rising to $2.7 billion. On a year-over-year basis, sales were down mid-single digits as expected, and we have now nearly lapped the top-line headwinds we've been experiencing on two programs for the past eighteen months. Looking forward, we believe that space is poised to return to growth given our positioning and opportunities in this arena. Moving to the bottom line on Slide five. Operational performance was outstanding again in quarter three. Segment operating income increased by 11% year over year. And our segment operating margin rate increased 80 basis points to 12.3%. AS operating income dollars were relatively flat compared to a year ago, and operating margin rate was 9.7%. This was driven by strong operating performance on mature production programs, as well as lower net profitability adjustments. As we do every quarter, we review our estimate to complete the LRIP phase of the B-21 program. And made no significant changes to the previously recognized loss. However, we experienced higher than expected costs to produce the EMD flight test aircraft which increased our estimate to manufacture the LRIP units. This increase was largely offset by a reduction in our expected loss on remaining LRIP lots due to a contract restructure that occurred during the quarter. Turning to DS. Quarter three margins improved to 11.4% driven by strong operational performance and higher net favorable EAC adjustments. While the Q2 margin outperformance was driven by Sentinel, this quarter's strength was broad-based with higher margin rates in each of the business areas. Mission Systems operating income increased 32%. And their Q3 segment OM rate increased nearly 300 basis points to 16.7%. This performance was enabled by intentional steps this team has taken to drive efficiencies, mitigate risk, and increase factory utilization. Which drove a $68 million favorable EAC adjustment in the restricted advanced microelectronics portfolio. And Space Systems also had a solid quarter of operational performance generating a margin rate of 11%. The strong bottom-line results drove higher earnings per share as shown on Slide June diluted earnings per share were $7.67 an increase of 10% compared to 2024. In addition to strong segment results, mark-to-market gains on marketable securities increased by $0.35 compared to Q3 of last year. These benefits along with higher net pension income partially offset by higher corporate unallocated expenses and a higher federal tax rate as previously disclosed. As we reflect on our performance to date and expectations for Q4, we have a few updates to our company-level guidance as shown on slide seven. For sales, we are adjusting our outlook to a range of $41.7 billion to $41.9 billion reflecting approximately 8% Q4 growth at the midpoint. We continue to expect a ramp in Q4 sales in all four segments, but at a slightly lower rate compared to our prior expectations. Importantly, we are maintaining our segment operating income dollar guidance range despite the lower sales volume. This results in a segment OM rate that is roughly 10 basis points higher than our prior guidance at the midpoint as a testament to the team's continued focus on disciplined program execution and driving efficiencies throughout the business. Moving to earnings per share. We are increasing our guidance by $0.65 now to a range of $25.65 to $26.05. The increase is driven by several factors. First, we are lowering our expectations for other corporate unallocated expenses to $250 million a reduction of $30 million driven by lower unallowable costs. Secondly, we have slight revisions to our expectations for pension income and the effective tax rate, each providing a modest boost to EPS. And as I mentioned, we experienced a return on marketable securities in the quarter which totaled roughly $80 million. Given market volatility, we have not assumed the entire Q3 gain in our full-year guidance expectations. Rounding out our company-level guidance is cash flow. We are reaffirming our free cash flow expectations of $3.05 billion to $3.35 billion. Third-quarter free cash flow of $1.3 billion was well ahead of the past few years. And we continue to expect the largest quarter of cash generation in the fourth quarter. Consistent with our seasonal pattern. In addition, the unique factors driving year-end cash as outlined during the Q2 call remain intact. Including lower Q4 cash tax payments, higher milestone payments, inventory liquidations at AS. For the year, our guidance represents 22% annual free cash flow growth at the midpoint making a third consecutive year free cash flow growth greater than 20%. Turning to segment level guidance on Slide eight. We are reaffirming our top-line guidance for DS and Space as they performed in line with our expectations in Q3. And we have not changed our view on their sales ramp in Q4. For Aeronautics, we are lowering top-line guidance to the high $12 billion range. As we outlined on our Q2 earnings call, the second half ramp at AS is based on higher B-21 volume, ramp on new program wins including Takimo, and normal production volume that is seasonally weighted towards the end of the year. And while all these factors remain intact, are projecting a modestly lower sales level due to delayed timing on certain programs. In addition, we are increasing our expectations for intercompany sales. Driven by higher activity on restricted programs throughout the portfolio. These are partially offset by an increase to our sales guidance expectations at MS based on the strength of their year-to-date results and expectations for continued growth in Q4. As a result, we now expect MS sales in the mid-twelve billion dollars range. With respect to segment operating margin rates, we have one update this quarter related to DS. As I mentioned, they delivered another strong quarter of operational performance and as a result, we are increasing the OM rate expectation to the high 10% range. Before concluding my prepared remarks, I wanted to build on Kathy's comments regarding our 2026 outlook. First, sales growth next year is expected to be more balanced across each of the segments. With each contributing to growth. Secondly, operating income is expected to grow compared to 2025. And we don't anticipate a repeat of the large EA adjustments we experienced this year on B-21, Sentinel, and microelectronics. Adjusting for these items, our outlook for low to mid 11% margins would represent an increase compared to 2025. I'd also like to share our latest projections for 2026 net pension income based on current market conditions. As we typically do this time of year, we've included a 2026 pension income sensitivity grid on Slide 10. Year to date through September, asset returns were just north of 9%. Slightly better than our initial expectations. And discount rates were down 25 basis points. This combination will result in a modest increase to 2026 net pension income compared to our prior projections. Depending on where we end the year. Importantly, our pension plans remain fully funded and we continue to project minimal cash contributions over the next several years. So in conclusion, we believe we are well positioned for a broad range of new opportunities. We remain focused on growing our business delivering strong operational performance and generating cash flows that allow us to execute our business strategy. With that, let's open the call for Q and A.