Thanks, Cleo, and hello everyone. Thanks for joining us today. We're pleased to have delivered an excellent first quarter in fiscal 2026. To briefly summarize the results, we generated $66.3 million in revenue, representing approximately 10% year-over-year growth and exceeding our expectations. Non-GAAP gross margin was 59%, up from 55% a year ago, and adjusted EBITDA profit came in at $1.2 million, representing our second sequential quarter of adjusted EBITDA profitability. We also generated $17.3 million of cash flow from operating activities and achieved our first-ever quarter of positive free cash flow at $8 million, a significant milestone for the company and for shareholders. Our backlog grew to over half a billion dollars at the end of the quarter, reinforcing our path to accelerating growth. Before we turn to our first quarter wins, I'd like to share a few takeaways from my recent travels visiting our customers and partners around the globe. In DC, I met with various leaders at the US government. The government's demand signal for smarter solutions that leverage the latest innovations from technology providers is ringing loud and clear. Although today's dynamic environment is creating uncertainty, my visit only reinforced our view that the opportunities outweigh the risks for Planet. While in Europe, I met with leaders across governments, and it's clear that the changing geopolitical landscape is resulting in a heightened need for Planet services. This builds on the increased awareness of the significant value of satellites that has grown since the start of the war in Ukraine. Overall, we are seeing unprecedented interest in our solutions. We see Planet as a reliable and trusted partner to our domestic and international customers during such times of global change. So as I turn to sales highlights, I'll start with the defense and intelligence sector, which was once again a key growth driver for the business this quarter. Revenue from the DNI sector grew over 20% year over year during Q1, driven by strong performance with our core data and solutions business, as well as our satellite services contract with JSA. During the quarter, Planet was awarded an eight-figure ACV expansion contract by a European defense intelligence customer for PlanetScope data and our maritime domain awareness solution. This relationship expanded rapidly, progressing from a pilot last year to an eight-figure operational contract. As a reminder, our maritime solution is a high-frequency board area solution with partner-enabled analytics for vessel identification and classification, enabling customers to monitor large areas of open ocean for mission-critical situation awareness. We won a seven-figure ACV expansion to provide MDA to one of our long-term customers, expanding their monitoring capability with Planet from land to sea. More broadly, we continue to see robust demand for downstream products that embed our capabilities into customers' operations, enhance situation awareness, and support informed decision-making. This quarter's wins are two of many proof points supporting the scale of this opportunity. Turning to the civil government sector, where first-quarter revenue was down year over year largely due to the expiration of our NICSI contract, we continue to see significant growth opportunity here. To share a few recent highlights, in March, we announced that we've been selected as the primary subcontract for the California Air Resources Board satellite data purchase program, SDPP. The $95 million contract was awarded to our partner Carbon Mapper and is centered on providing the state of California with methane data built upon TANAGA hyperspectral collections, as well as other data products. This three-year-plus program marks the first major purchase of Tenager data by a customer outside of the CarbonMAPA consortium itself. It demonstrates the market potential within civil government for large-scale automated environmental monitoring. This approach can be expanded to other government customers around the world. Last month, we announced an expansion of our seven-figure countrywide contract with the German government entity BKG, which now includes insights from planetary variables, water monitoring services from Planet's partner EOMAP, and access to Planet's insights platform. The data will be used to monitor water, forest, agriculture, socioeconomic, and land use, as well as support the federal monitoring campaigns and environmental assessments. During Q1, we also expanded our business with the Welsh government to help inform agriculture policy and natural resource management. Using our high-cadence satellite imagery, historical archive, and tasking capabilities, the Welsh government is deriving data-informed management plans for agriculture efficiency, water and land use change, and emergency response. Shifting finally to the commercial sector, where revenue was up slightly year over year, we continue to see signs of more stable performance despite quarter-to-quarter variability. To share a highlight, we recently signed a multiyear expansion with Onyx, an outdoor digital navigation company, to inform their suite of recreation applications with PlanetScope products. With Planet satellite data, the apps enable users to stay informed about conditions in remote areas as they plan outdoor pursuits. Next, onto our nascent satellite services offering. Firstly, our team is executing well on the JSA contract. Secondly, as mentioned last time, we're pursuing a handful of highly strategic deals, each significant in scale, and I'm pleased to report that we saw very solid progress with multiple prospects during the quarter. These deals are win-wins, providing software and satellite services to our customers and accelerating and funding the development of our new fleets. Furthermore, the California STPP reward showcases how a set of satellites initially funded through satellite services can drive incremental data business. Turning to product updates starting on the platform side, we recently streamlined our self-service purchasing offering for small customers to make it easier to get started with the Planet Insights platform. This supports Planet's strategies to support small customers efficiently with a flexible and scalable model that grows with their operations. For our larger customers, the platform delivers time series solutions and insights that become embedded into their workflows, which is key to expanding our addressable market with customers who haven't traditionally used geospatial data. We also released our new aircraft detection analytic feed, which automates the detection of aircraft, including commercial, private, and military around the world. By combining advancements in artificial intelligence with Planet's high-frequency scan of the Earth, we're able to offer this product at a global scale, aiming to help users analyze patterns of life and the normal anomalous geopolitical behavior. This presents a massive and unprecedented capability for analysts, with or without geospatial expertise. On the space system side, Canada One, which we launched last year, is servicing a number of early customers across energy, defense, civil government, and agriculture markets. Our space systems team has rapidly progressed to satellites' operational maturity, expanding the satellite's imaging capacity to bring down approximately 300,000 square kilometers per day via hundreds of collections. From Tanja One, we're not only extremely pleased with the quality of data and the insights being derived but also with early wins showing momentum and indicative of our demand for this new capability in the market. Meanwhile, Pelican Two, which we launched in January, is continuing to perform very well. We've completed our commissioning process, fully validated the payload and optics, and began providing data to select customers. Between our first two Pelican satellites and our TangentOne satellite, we now have over two and a half years of on-orbit experience of our smallsat platform modular spacecraft architecture, which is shared between the two fleets. These on-orbit technology demonstrations have provided us with critical learnings as we develop this technology and prepare to launch operational fleets. As a reminder, we plan to have multiple pelican launches this year. We're also working on additional Pelican for our partner, JSA, which are expected to begin launching in calendar 2027. I'd like to take a moment to commend our global sales, product, and space systems organizations on a phenomenal quarter and thank them for their hard work, winning, and delivering for our customers. Overall, our first-quarter performance validates our strategic direction, relentless customer focus, and disciplined execution. Looking ahead, we are going to continue to aggressively execute on our two key initiatives: one, delivering integrated global insights via AI-enabled solutions, and two, rapidly expanding our satellite services offering. Both are seeing strong traction, and our endgame is clear. Establish Tana as the undisputed market leader for monitoring the physical world at a global scale. With that, I'll turn it over to Ashley to discuss our financials. Over to you, Ash.